Posted on 06/23/2005 9:00:06 AM PDT by areafiftyone
Arizona Senator John McCain would overwhelmingly defeat New York Senator and former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in a theoretical 2008 presidential match-up, a new Zogby America poll reveals.
The survey also shows that in a re-match of the 2004 election, Americans would now vote in equal numbers for Democrat John Kerry and President George W. Bush, while President Bushs approval rating has plummeted to 44%the lowest numbers of his presidency. The poll also found fewer than two-in-five (39%) voters approve of President Bushs handling of the Iraq war.
The Zogby America survey of 1000 likely voters, conducted from June 20 through 22, 2005, has a margin of error of +/-3.2 percentage points.
The same survey finds Congress job rating even lower, with just one-in-four likely voters (26%) rating the legislature favorablyand just 2% saying it is doing an excellent job.
The survey finds that both senators far outdistance their nearest competition for their parties nominationsbut in a head-to-head match-up, the Arizona Republican bests the New York Democrat by 19 points, leading her 54% to 35%. McCain would also defeat Massachusetts Senatorand former Democratic presidential candidateJohn Kerry by a full 20 points, 55% to 35%.
McCain has majority support in every single geographic region of the country. But more telling may be the fact that, even in the states carried by Kerry in 2004, McCain comes out comfortably on topleading Clinton by 49 to 38% and Kerry by 50% to 40%. Among the states carried by President Bush, the margin is even wider, giving McCain a 58% to 33% lead over Clinton and 59% to 32% lead over Kerry.
McCain leads with most demographics, though Clinton would best him narrowly among Hispanic voters (45% to 38%) and would win African Americans by 80% to 19%. But that 19% would be the highest vote tally for a Republican with African Americans in decades. McCain leads Clinton with every age group except voters under 30, where the two are in a dead heat.
President Bushs Job Approval Plunges to Historic Lows
The drop in President Bushs approval rating puts him at the lowest numbers since his presidency began. The Zogby America survey has been conducted on a regular basis throughout Bushs two terms.
|
Positive |
Excellent |
Good |
Negative |
Fair |
Poor |
6-22-05 |
44 |
15 |
29 |
56 |
22 |
34 |
5-25-05 |
46 |
18 |
28 |
53 |
23 |
30 |
4-18-05 |
46 |
19 |
27 |
53 |
23 |
30 |
2-25-05 |
47 |
21 |
26 |
53 |
22 |
31 |
2-14-05 |
50 |
24 |
26 |
50 |
18 |
32 |
1-21-05 |
49 |
21 |
28 |
51 |
22 |
29 |
11-16-04 |
51 |
23 |
28 |
49 |
18 |
31 |
9-20-04 |
47 |
18 |
29 |
52 |
20 |
32 |
6-05-04 |
46 |
19 |
27 |
55 |
22 |
33 |
1-20-04 |
49 |
19 |
30 |
50 |
27 |
23 |
9-25-03 |
50 |
22 |
28 |
50 |
23 |
27 |
6-10-03 |
58 |
27 |
31 |
41 |
22 |
19 |
9-25-02 |
64 |
26 |
38 |
36 |
21 |
15 |
6-14-02 |
70 |
33 |
37 |
30 |
20 |
10 |
1-7-02 |
80 |
45 |
35 |
19 |
15 |
4 |
6-22-05 |
Overall |
Red states |
Blue states |
Excellent |
15 |
17 |
14 |
Good |
29 |
31 |
25 |
Positive |
44 |
48 |
39 |
Fair |
22 |
22 |
21 |
Poor |
34 |
29 |
41 |
Negative |
56 |
51 |
62 |
Not sure |
0 |
1 |
0 |
Zogby International also continues to track the Presidents performance in both the Red States which he carried in the 2004 election and the Blue States carried by Senator John Kerry, the Massachusetts Democrat Bush defeated last fall. Just one month ago, Bushs job performance was supported by a 51% majority in the Red States, but now has slumped to 48%. And in the Blue States, the President has dropped one point from 40% in May to 39% in the latest poll.
Kerry, Bush Would Now Tie in Election
Vote Again for Bush |
45 |
Vote Again for Kerry |
43 |
Vote Again for Third Party |
3 |
Switch to Kerry Vote |
2 |
Switch to Bush Vote |
0 |
Switch to Third Party Vote |
2 |
Would Not Vote |
2 |
The most significant development in the poll may be that Americans now say they would vote for Senator Kerry and President Bush in equal numbers if last Novembers election were re-held. The new poll finds 45% say they would vote for Bush and 45% say they would now vote for his vanquished 2004 opponent. Although before rounding Bush holds a very slight lead, the two are, for the first time since the November election, back into a statistical dead heat.
The drop in Bushs support comes against a backdrop of lost momentum in the Senate, where much of the Presidents agendaincluding the nomination of U.N. Ambassador-designate John Boltonis stalled.
Presidents Job Approval in Negative Territory on Host of Issues
Presidents |
Positive |
Excellent |
Good |
Negative |
Fair |
Poor |
Not |
War on Terrorism |
49 |
20 |
29 |
50 |
24 |
26 |
1 |
War in Iraq |
39 |
13 |
26 |
61 |
15 |
46 |
0 |
Taxes |
36 |
13 |
23 |
62 |
28 |
34 |
2 |
Foreign Policy |
36 |
10 |
26 |
61 |
26 |
35 |
3 |
Jobs and the economy |
35 |
9 |
26 |
65 |
28 |
37 |
1 |
Education |
33 |
7 |
26 |
64 |
34 |
30 |
3 |
Environment |
30 |
6 |
24 |
66 |
29 |
37 |
5 |
Social Security and Medicare |
27 |
7 |
20 |
69 |
23 |
46 |
4 |
President Bush has slipped into negative territory on his handling of a number of issues surrounding his presidency. While the nation is split on his handling of the War on Terrorism, the presidents support has dropped into negative territory on a number of other issues, from his anemic numbers on the Iraq War to his dismal ratings on Social Security and Medicarean area he began his second term vowing to reform.
Majority Now Says Nation on Wrong Track
6-22-05 |
Overall |
Red states |
Blue states |
Right Track |
43 |
48 |
35 |
Wrong Direction |
53 |
48 |
60 |
Not sure |
5 |
4 |
5 |
The number of Americans who now say the nation is on the wrong track continues to climb as well, with 53% now saying the nation is heading in the wrong direction. Just one month ago, that number was at 50%. Much of this increase comes from a shift among Americans who, in May, were undecided about the nations direction now saying the nation is on the wrong track. While both Red Staters and Blue Staters are both more pessimistic than a month ago, the belief the country is heading in the wrong direction is particularly strong in the Blue States, where just one-in-three (35%) say the nation is on the right track.
Congress Rates Very Unfavorably
6-22-05 |
Overall |
Red
|
Blue
|
Excellent |
2 |
2 |
2 |
Good |
24 |
28 |
19 |
Positive |
26 |
30 |
20 |
Fair |
47 |
47 |
47 |
Poor |
24 |
22 |
26 |
Negative |
71 |
69 |
73 |
Not sure |
4 |
2 |
6 |
The poll finds Congress rated even less favorably than the President, with just one-in-four Americans holding a favorable impression of the co-equal branch of governments job performance. Seven-in-ten American voters, meanwhile, view Congress in negative terms, with half of all likely voters (47%) terming Congress job performance fair. The disapproval of Congress crosses the Red-Blue divide, with voters in both areas holding a negative view of the legislaturethough Red Staters are slightly more favorable to the Republican-controlled body.
In a sign of voter dissatisfaction with Congress, a generic ballot question that asks voters which partys candidate they would select for Congress finds the minority Democrats polling at 38% while the majority Republicans take 33%. A full one-in-five (20%) say they are not sure or will not vote in the mid-term Congressional elections next fall.
Zogby International conducted interviews of 1000 likely voters chosen at random nationwide. All calls were made from Zogby International headquarters in Utica, N.Y., from June 20 to 22, 2005. The margin of error is +/- 3.2 percentage points. Slight weights were added to region, party, age, race, religion, and gender to more accurately reflect the voting population. Margins of error are higher in sub-groups.
I agree. I want Allen/Condi. But it sickens me to think people would allow Hillary to destroy our nation because they didn't get their way. I don't think McCain has a chance for the nomination, but he would get my vote if he is nominated.
Maybe Republicans could pull their heads out of their asses and give us a real conservative worth voting for.
No can do? Then whatever happens is your fault...not the voters.
Wasnt it mccain that said Hilliary would make a great president just a few months ago.
What would be the difference? None that I can see. McCain sides with socialists/marxists every chance he gets.
hmmmm.
Who to root for?
Would there be any real difference?
Looks like I'm sitting out this sorry election. (of course this means taht McCain actually wins the GOP primaries...)
Go ask Billy Dale what would be the difference. Ask Jim McDougal. Ask Vince Foster. As the Boy Scout honor guard whose flag was spit on. Ask Paul Frey, the FJB. Ask the airport guard who got run over by her limo. Ask Juanita Broaddrick. Ask Kathleen Willey. Ask those in the health care profession who were shut out of her secret task force. Ask the 900 people whose FBI files she had. Your comment is unbelievable.
He was caught on TV by a reporter asking the loaded question.
Are those liberal numbers? Are those numbers that are going to attract Democrats?
Again, I'd rather have somebody else ... more than anything, somebody younger who could serve two terms ... in 2008. But again, Hillary vs. McCain, absolutely no contest, I vote for McCain.
IMHO, everyone can disagree with me and flame away if you will, I'm donning my asbestos and Nomex, most of the crap McCain has been pulling in the last few years stems from a personal animus toward George W. Bush than any marked gravitation to the left politically, because again, the numbers don't show it. And there would be too much at stake ... possibly even the survival of this country as we know it ... if Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee, for me to sit at home and twiddle my thumbs just because the alternative didn't get along with the previous president and spent eight years in a snit with him.
John McCain is an idiot that will not make the first cut.
Any proof of any of that? Until somebody can prove it, it's all just hearsay.
I hate Hillary too, but all my reasons are just hearsay because nobody that CAN has the balls. I'm only one vote. How do you think you're going to convince the rest of the voters when all you have is hearsay?
Agreed......sigh.
McCain? Not with my vote. Period.
In some cases I'll hold my nose (Bush). In McCain's case, I'll be voting for either the Libertarian or Constitution Party. Maybe even the Democrat if it's a Zell Miller type.
I'll even go so far to say that McCain isn't well liked in my county....which he almost WON in 2000.
But that's the rub...it's his lack of respect for W. He comes off as a MOLE. Met with Daschel early on, allowed Kerry to court him, flies to Bagdad with Hillary for a love-fest on MTP - on and on and on.
He's NOT popular with Republicans. Hillary wouldn't mind running against McCain. Even better, probably hopes he pulls a Perot and goes Indy. Thinks it will keep just enough Repub. voters home on election day.
Sorry, but IMO he's missing that likeability factor.
Americans dig 'face-time' seeking politi-sluts. The bumpersticker "Kill your TV" is evermore applicable these days.
<< McCain Would Trounce Hillary in 08 Match-up ... >>
And pigs would fly if they weighed in at two-hundred pounds lighter and had wings and Hell would FReeze if it was cold enough and I would have one more uncle if my aunt had cojones.
you can choose Giuliani. For all the talk trashing him, he would be a better president then McCain, he is a more decisive and stronger leader, and he could pull the same moderate votes that McCain could pull in the general election.
Run MCCain, and Hillary still wins new york state. Run Rudy, and he wins NY and NJ - its very hard for the Dems to win enough electoral votes without those two states.
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