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TWS Straw Poll: A GOP Elite Eight, Heading toward a Final Four? (Cruz, Fiorina, Kasich & Rubio?)
The Weekly Standard ^
| September 7, 2015
| William Kristol
Posted on 09/08/2015 12:40:50 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The results of the latest straw poll of WEEKLY STANDARD readers are in. It's not a scientific poll, of coursebut since the respondents are very perceptive WEEKLY STANDARD readers, I'm going to claim (why not?) that the results are a suggestive leading indicator of where the GOP race may be going.
We asked for first, second, and third place choices. Here are the first place results:
Marco Rubio 21%
Donald Trump 15%
Ted Cruz 15%
Carly Fiorina 12%
Ben Carson 11%
Scott Walker 9%
John Kasich 7%
Jeb Bush 4%
No one else had more than 1.5 percent of the first place votes.
Now here are the percentage of the ballots on which the candidate is mentioned for first, second, or third place:
Carly Fiorina 52%
Marco Rubio 46%
Ben Carson 44%
Ted Cruz 40%
Scott Walker 29%
Donald Trump 25%
John Kasich 20%
Jeb Bush 14%
All others in mid-to-low single digits.
What to conclude?
1. An Elite Eight seems to have emerged. Someone else could come from far behind or enter the race latebut at this point it would seem likely one of these eight contenders listed above will be the nominee.
2. Scott Walker, who's led past TWS straw polls, has had a very bad few weeks. Can he recover?
3. John Kasich has a shot to join or replace Jeb Bush as the establishment candidate unafraid to make the case for nominating someone with governing experience.
4. Ben Carson has had a well-publicized and impressive move up. But Carly Fiorina has also rocketed up in our straw polls, and Ted Cruz has been gaining pretty consistently as well.
5. If you tend to think, as I do, that ultimately neither Trump nor Carson will be nominated, and if you assume no comeback for Walker or Bush, you get a Final Four of Rubio, Fiorina, Cruz, and Kasich. Which seems plausible.
TOPICS: Campaign News; Parties; Polls
KEYWORDS: 2016election; bush; carson; cruz; fiorina; kasich; polls; rubio; trump; walker; weeklystandard
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Discuss.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Wait, what? Is this is the end of Trump, for the nth time?
2
posted on
09/08/2015 12:44:17 AM PDT
by
JoSixChip
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Rubio? Seriously?
"The Weekly Standard" is actually "The Weakly Standard"
3
posted on
09/08/2015 12:49:24 AM PDT
by
Bobalu
(See my freep page for political images.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
4
posted on
09/08/2015 12:50:01 AM PDT
by
Jim Robinson
(Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
I will be more interested in polls ( all all types) after the “endorsement season” of November- January has wrapped up. Iowa numbers could swing very quickly depending on who Rep. King endorses. Endorsements by leading Southern evangelicals could also cause a huge “disturbance in the Force”.
Right now polling sizes are either too small or the surveys are on-line straw polls that have no scientific basis and can be easily manipulated.
5
posted on
09/08/2015 12:50:02 AM PDT
by
brothers4thID
(Be professional, be courteous, and have a plan to kill everyone in the room.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
William Kristol is another LIBERAL that is
TRYINGto make everyone believe that he's a
"conservative".
But he's 'full of it'.
The word "neocons" is ONLY used by LIBERALS, trying to insult Conservatives.
The is no such thing as a "NEW" Conservative. Conservatives ARE Conservative, plain and simple.
But read
this"
Liberals, Conservatives, and Neocons Learn the Difference!
March 12, 2014
Almost everybody is confused about the word "neoconservative" and its shortened form, "neocon."
I find that liberals/Democrats seem to use it as a sort of disrespectful form of "conservative,"and probably have no idea the the words have distinct meanings.
On the other hand, I know of some conservatives who define it as "new conservatives,"meaning people who were formerly something else, but have converted to conservatism.
Both are wrong.
As near as I can tell, "neo-" doesn't apply to any other word that way formerly not X, but having become X.
No, "neo-" almost always refers to an ideology that is different from the root word in a significant way.Neoconfederates are not people who want to secede and become a separate country.
They want the ideals of the Confederacy to be applied to modern politics, more or less, but not all of them.
Neoliberal is a more vague term,but it specifically applies to people who may have SOME of the attributes of liberals,
but who contradict liberalism in their advocacy of free trade and privatization
and other ideas usually thought of as conservative.
And, finally, neoconservatives are mostly those moderate cold war LIBERALS who defected to the Republican party when the Democrats got totally flaky with McGovern and his ilk.
Their ultimate origin, however, is not the Democratic party but the Trotskyite movement.
Jack Kerwick elaborates.
Read
this:
Most "Conservatives" Are Secretly Neoconservatives
12 March, 2014, by Jack Kerwick, Ph.D.
A colleague of mine has drawn my attention to a Washington Post blog post Why Most Conservatives Are Secretly Liberals by a Professor John Sides, a political scientist at Georgetown University.
Sides agrees with fellow political scientists Christopher Ellis and James Stimson, co-authors of Ideology in America.
Ellis and Stimson CONTEND thatAmerica is, at bottom, a center-left nation,
for while 30 percent of self-described liberals are consistent in endorsing liberal policy prescriptions,
the same sort of consistency can be ascribed to only 15 percent of conservatives.
And another 30 percent of conservatives actually advance liberal positions.
In short, Americans may TALK the talk of conservatism, but they WALK the walk of liberalism.
That is, they favor Big Government.
Sides, Ellis, and Stimson, it seems clear to me, are liberals.
It doesnt require much reading between the lines to discern this.
That they associate liberals, and liberals ALONE, with such virtues as consistency and such lofty ideals as a cleaner environment and a stronger safety net is enough to bear this out.
Yet in peddling the ridiculous, patently absurd notion thatconservatives see the media as PROMOTING conservatism,
the verdict regarding their liberalism is seen for the NO-BRAINER that it is.
There is, though, another CLUE that unveils Sides, Ellis, and Stimsons ideological PREJUDICES:They equate the term liberalism with a robust affirmation of Big Government.
They treat liberalism synonymously with its modern, Welfare-Statist incarnation.
There is no mention here of the fact that, originally, liberalism referred toa vision that attached supreme value to individual liberty,
a vision in which government played, and had to play, a minimal role in the lives of its citizens.
And there is no mention of the fact that, if liberalism is now an ugly word,
it is because the very same socialists who made socialism an ugly word hijacked liberalism when it enjoyed a favorable reception
and visited upon it the same fate that they secured for socialism.
In other words, if Sides himself wanted to be bluntly honest, hed have to admit that liberals are secretly socialists.
Still, though their premises are bogus, Sides and his colleagues draw the correct conclusion thatmost conservatives are NOTHING OF THE KIND.
The truth of the matter is thatthe vast majority of contemporary conservatives are neoconservatives.
Now, neoconservatism is a term that hasnt the best reputation.
It has ALWAYS BEEN CONTROVERSIAL,
and most of its proponents have DISAVOWED IT to the point of, preposterously, condemning it as an anti-Semitic SLUR.
But George W. Bush and his party inflicted potentially irrevocable damage upon the label.
Conservatism is a more marketable label.
Nevertheless, the reality is that neoconservatism is indeed a distinct school of political thought.
Beyond this, it is fundamentally different in kind from classical conservatism.
Irving Kristol, the so-called Godfather of neoconservatism, an appellation that he readily endorsed, ADMITS this in noting boththat neoconservatism exists
and that conservative can be misleading when used to describe it.
Neoconservatism, you see, is THE INVENTION OF LEFTISTS like Kristol himself.
When the Democratic Party began veering too far to the Left in the 1960s, Kristol and more moderate leftists began turning toward the Republican Party.
So as TO DISTINGUISH THEMSELVES FROM traditional conservatives, they coined the term neoconservatism.
Neoconservatives, Kristol asserts, are not at all hostile to the idea of a welfare state even if they reject the vast and energetic bureaucracies created by the Great Society.
Neoconservatives ENDORSE social security, unemployment insurance, and some kind of family assistance plan, among other measures.
But whats most interesting, particularly at a time when ObamaCare has DIVIDED the country, is that Kristol reminds us thatneoconservatives SUPPORT some form of national health insurance.
In all truthfulness, however, neither a degree in political science nor an IQ above four is required to know thatneoconservatism has always championed Big Government
for it is its foreign policy vision more than anything else that distinguishes it from its competitors.
For neoconservatives, America is exceptional in being, as Kristol puts it, a creedal nation,the only nation in all of human history to have been founded upon an ideology of equality, of natural rights.
The U.S.A., then, has a responsibility to promote this ideology throughout the world.
And it is by way of a potentially boundless military i.e. Big Government that this ideological patriotism is to be executed.
Had the foregoing political scientists been looking in the right places, they would BE FORCED TO CONCLUDE that most conservatives are secretly neoconservatives.
So, you see that those WHO THEY CALL
"neoconservatives", are really nothing more than
the old moderate side of the DemocRATS.
It's just THAT SIMPLE .
6
posted on
09/08/2015 1:13:40 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Such convoluted BS. All this is is another attempt to twist things to dump Trump from the top. Seriously, does anyone think Cruz, Fiorina, Kasich, and Rubio will be the final four standing?! Not likely.
7
posted on
09/08/2015 1:17:59 AM PDT
by
Reno89519
(American Lives Matter! US Citizen, Veteran, Conservative, Republican. I vote. Trump 2016.)
To: Yosemitest
I’ve long thought that “neocon” was a word used by liberals and establishment RINOs as a epithet for conservatives.
As for Kristol, he’s gonna keep pulling trash out his butt until the election proves him wrong. He and his Sunday panel ilk can keep on spitting that bile and venom - it’s doing them a fat lot of good. I’ve pretty much stopped watching any Sunday panel show as well as Fox.
8
posted on
09/08/2015 2:31:00 AM PDT
by
Gaffer
To: Gaffer
I've tuned them out, also.
Occasionally, I'll watch Hannity, but I mostly get my news from Glenn Beck, Rush, Anncoulter.com, and www.breitbart.com..
Anybody else simply isn't worth my time.
9
posted on
09/08/2015 2:49:36 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
'Discuss' what?
That Kristol (supporter of the GOPe) is trying to wish Trump away?!?
10
posted on
09/08/2015 3:09:18 AM PDT
by
harpu
( "...it's better to be hated for who you are than loved for someone you're not!")
To: Reno89519
"Seriously, does anyone think Cruz, Fiorina, Kasich, and Rubio will be the final four standing?! Not likely." It's a good list for Trump's VP selection but nothing more!
11
posted on
09/08/2015 3:12:26 AM PDT
by
harpu
( "...it's better to be hated for who you are than loved for someone you're not!")
To: Gaffer
"Ive pretty much stopped watching any Sunday panel show as well as Fox." AMEN!
I'll go back to FOX when 'allaboutme' Kelly is gone!
12
posted on
09/08/2015 3:14:55 AM PDT
by
harpu
( "...it's better to be hated for who you are than loved for someone you're not!")
To: 2ndDivisionVet
interesting.....not sure where to go with this.
13
posted on
09/08/2015 3:21:15 AM PDT
by
rrrod
(Just an old guy with a gun in his pocket.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
14
posted on
09/08/2015 3:31:15 AM PDT
by
Iscool
(HOA member...(heaven is a gated community))
To: 2ndDivisionVet
This may well be the reading audience of the magazine, but where else does any poll show Rubio with a quarter of the vote?
15
posted on
09/08/2015 3:43:46 AM PDT
by
BigEdLB
(We need to target the 'Ministry of Virtue' on Iranian bombing runs. It is not vituous)
To: brothers4thID
Good point. This is an online poll from TWS website. Ron Paul isn’t running or he’d have 50%
16
posted on
09/08/2015 3:45:56 AM PDT
by
BigEdLB
(We need to target the 'Ministry of Virtue' on Iranian bombing runs. It is not vituous)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
It’s a meaningless poll of subscribers to the Weekly Standard. It represents their wishful thinking. The Weekly Standard readers are not representative of the general public.
Just another mindless attempt to sway opinion.
My opinion can only be swayed by someone with better ideas than Trump to fix America. This does not include scRubio or RINOette Fiorina.
17
posted on
09/08/2015 4:00:52 AM PDT
by
redfreedom
(All it takes for evil to win is for good people to do nothing - that's how the left took over.)
To: BigEdLB
I do not think there is one. Amnesty shills are just not very popular with anybody but the CoC cronies at the moment.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Rubio, even after coming out against the amnesty plan that failed, still carries the AMNESTY baggage. A lot here on FR dont like him no matter what. He is Hispanic and Catholic so thats a double hit for some but I still think he may be VP.
Time will tell.
19
posted on
09/08/2015 4:13:34 AM PDT
by
rrrod
(Just an old guy with a gun in his pocket.)
To: Gaffer
You should see NRO. I call them “The Four Horsemen of the Anti-Trump Apocalypse,” Jim Geraghty, Jonah Goldberg, Jay Cost, Guy Benson (the latter may not write for NRObut should he’s such an echo).
20
posted on
09/08/2015 4:16:39 AM PDT
by
LS
("Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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