There were insufficient Asian or Hispanic respondents in the poll to separate out either of those groups' views with confidence.
Hispanic respondents are also included among whites or blacks if they identified themselves as such.
In comparison, 41 percent of Hispanic respondents approved of his performance and 22 percent disapproved.
In 1980, about 40 percent of Hispanic respondents marked "Other Race."
For the 183 Hispanic respondents it is plus or minus 7 percentage points.
In many ways, the Hispanic respondents questioned over the course of two weeks mirrored traditional Democratic ethnic constituencies.
Among blacks, 24 percent thought profiling was acceptable; among Hispanic respondents, 31 percent.
In 2000, almost half of the Hispanic respondents, 48 percent, identified themselves as white.
Black New Yorkers were somewhat more optimistic than white or Hispanic respondents on virtually every measure, the poll found.
For the 310 Hispanic respondents, it is plus or minus 6 points.