Posted on 12/22/2003 11:53:00 AM PST by PJ-Comix
ROCHESTER, N.Y., Dec. 22 /PRNewswire/ -- Howard Dean has established a strong national lead over all other candidates for the Democratic candidates. While the selection of the Democratic candidate will depend on the Iowa caucuses and primary elections in New Hampshire and many other states, the former Vermont governor has pulled ahead of all other candidates among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents nationwide. The Harris Poll(R) finds that Dean is now the preferred candidate of 21% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, with a strong lead over Senator Joe Lieberman (10%), who is in second place, and all the other candidates. These are the results of a nationwide Harris Poll of 993 adults, of whom 393 were Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents, surveyed by telephone by Harris Interactive(R) between December 10 and 16, 2003. In the two months since an earlier mid-October poll, Dean has increased his share of the vote from 11% to 21%, while Senator Lieberman has seen his share decline slightly from 13% to 10%. Below Lieberman on this list, four candidates are bunched together, General Wesley Clark (7%), Congressman Richard Gephardt (7%), Al Sharpton (6%) and Carol Moseley-Brown (6%). Senator John Kerry, who was once regarded by some pundits as the strongest candidate is preferred by only four percent (4%), with Senator John Edwards (3%) and Congressman Dennis Kucinich at the end of the pack.
TABLE 1 2004 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES HEARD OF (Among Democrats and Independents) "Which of the following Democratic presidential candidates have you heard of?"
Base: Democrats and Independents
October December 10-16 All Democrats All Democrats and & Independents Democratic- Leaning Independents
% % Joe Lieberman 81 85 Howard Dean 58 76 Al Sharpton 70 70 Richard Gephardt 68 67 John Kerry 63 65 John Edwards 50 58 Wesley Clark 53 52 Carol Moseley-Braun 44 43 Dennis Kucinich 30 27
NOTE: October 2003 poll did not separate the direction the Independents' political leanings.
TABLE 2 2004 Democratic Presidential Candidates - First Preferences "And which one of these would you prefer to be the Democratic candidate?" (Among Democrats and Independents)
Base: Democrats and Independents
October December 10-16 All Democrats All Democrats and & Independents Democratic- Leaning Independents
% % Howard Dean 11 21 Joe Lieberman 13 10 Wesley Clark 12 7 Richard Gephardt 8 7 Carol Moseley-Braun 5 6 Al Sharpton 5 6 John Kerry 10 4 John Edwards 4 3 Dennis Kucinich 3 1 Not sure 26 34
NOTE: October 2003 poll did not separate the direction the Independents' political leanings.
Methodology The Harris Poll(R) was conducted by telephone within the United States between December 10 and 16, 2003 among a nationwide cross-section of 993 adults (ages 18+). Figures for age, sex, race, education, number of adults and number of voice/telephone lines in the household were weighted where necessary to align them with their actual proportions in the population. In theory, with a probability sample of this size, one can say with 95 percent certainty that the results have a statistical precision of +/-3 percentage points of what they would be if the entire adult population had been polled with complete accuracy. Unfortunately, there are several other possible sources of error in all polls or surveys that are probably more serious than theoretical calculations of sampling error. They include refusals to be interviewed (non-response), question wording and question order, interviewer bias, weighting by demographic control data and screening (e.g., for likely voters). It is impossible to quantify the errors that may result from these factors. These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the National Council on Public Polls.
About Harris Interactive(R) Harris Interactive (http://www.harrisinteractive.com) is a worldwide market research and consulting firm best known for The Harris Poll(R), and for pioneering the Internet method to conduct scientifically accurate market research. Headquartered in Rochester, New York, U.S.A., Harris Interactive combines proprietary methodologies and technology with expertise in predictive, custom and strategic research. The Company conducts international research through wholly owned subsidiaries-London-based HI Europe (http://www.hieurope.com) and Tokyo-based Harris Interactive Japan-as well as through the Harris Interactive Global Network of local market- and opinion-research firms, and various U.S. offices. EOE M/F/D/V To become a member of the Harris Poll Online(SM) and be invited to participate in future online surveys, visit http://www.harrispollonline.com.
Hey, I've heard rumors that, like Kerry fought in a war or something, you know, and got, like, some medals or something. Like, is that true? Did, like, Bush make him fight in Iran or something?
John Kerry a Vietnam veteran? Gosh, I had no idea.
...all the way to the Dem'Rats' '04 o'bliteration!!! And because of Terry McAuliffe's front loading of the primaries (in order to avoid bloody family feuds between Dem candidates), there may not be anything they can do to avoid it. Of course, though, not a single primary vote has been cast yet, and the Dem voters may have a shock in store for Dean in the person of Gephardt or Lieberman. I would love to see Dean's crazed demonic facial contortions if he lost big in some of the early primaries! He'd make Carville look sane!
of whom 393 were Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents
393 is too small to get a good accurate response. It is probably + or - about 7%...which means these low level numbers (4% vs 6%) are meaningless. It takes about 1000 to get to +/- 3%.
Surely you jest. Did Sgt York serve in WWI? Did Audie Murphy serve in WW II? Did Al Gore serve in Vietnam?
All of which he tossed over a fence in a PR stunt.
CONGRATULATIONS! You have asked the QUESTION OF THE DAY!
Accounts vary but it appears that Vietnam Veteran Kerry was on the American side at least until he returned to America. From that point on, opinions differ greatly.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.