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Hillary leads Dems, Republicans in poll: NY voters would choose senator over Obama, Giuliani
New York Business.com ^ | Feb 4, 2007 | Erik Engquist

Posted on 02/12/2007 12:49:15 PM PST by Reagan Man

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is poised to trump all comers in New York's presidential primary and general elections in 2008, according to a Crain's New York Business poll.

The survey of 600 registered voters across the state also found that Rudy Giuliani would handily win a Republican primary but lose the state in a final race for the White House. In addition, the results show that Mayor Michael Bloomberg, if he runs as an independent, would be little more than a long shot.

The results reflect the advantages enjoyed by Ms. Clinton, who is fresh off a $30.8 million re-election campaign in which she drew 67% of the vote and is the only New Yorker to have announced a presidential bid. In a prospective Democratic primary, the second-term senator was favored by 54% of party members, far ahead of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., at 18%, and John Edwards, a former North Carolina senator, at 5%.

In one-on-one matchups with Republicans, Ms. Clinton outpolled Mr. Giuliani 53% to 32% and Sen. John McCain of Arizona 55% to 26%.

The poll is a snapshot of the present, not a forecast, and does not guarantee an easy ride for the state's junior senator.

"For Clinton, her strength is broad and impressive, but the real question is, How deep is it?" says Craig Charney, president of Charney Research, which conducted the poll from Jan. 22 to Jan. 25. "How well will it hold up in the give-and-take of a presidential campaign?"

Experts say that early polling favors Ms. Clinton because it is heavily influenced by name recognition, and that the Democratic race in New York will get tighter as voters become more familiar with Mr. Obama. By the same token, Mr. Giuliani has less potential to gain support because he's already well-known here.

Mr. Giuliani would trounce Mr. McCain in a state Republican primary, according to the poll. But in a hypothetical general election he lagged not only Ms. Clinton, but also Mr. Obama — by 42% to 31% in a head-to-head matchup.

"I'm surprised; I thought Rudy would actually do better," says Jerry Skurnik of Prime New York, a Manhattan company that crunches election data. "It just shows what bad shape Republicans are in in this state."

Blue state Analysts attributed Mr. Giuliani's poor showing to Democrats' dominance in New York. In the poll, twice as many respondents identified themselves as Democrats than as Republicans. Mr. Giuliani did win two mayoral elections in heavily Democratic New York City, but voters tend not to cross party lines in presidential races. Nonetheless, one commentator who believes that Mr. Giuliani could win the presidency notes that the former mayor's focus has been elsewhere.

"Rudy has been very active politically, but not in New York state. He's been traveling throughout the country," says Steven Malanga, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a think tank close to Mr. Giuliani. "If Rudy were ever to face Obama in a general election, he would do much better once the actual campaign began in New York. Once he reacquainted himself with New Yorkers in a campaign, his numbers would rise."

Lately, though, Mr. Giuliani has been moving to the political right to head off red-state criticism that he's too liberal on gun control, abortion and homosexuality. That may be backfiring in New York, a solidly blue state where even Republicans tend to be moderates. "Rudy has worked to associate himself with Bush and the national Republican Party," says former Democratic pollster Mark Blumenthal, editor and publisher of Pollster.com.

The Crain's poll does not augur well for a run by Mr. Bloomberg. In a hypothetical three-way race, Mr. Bloomberg tallied just 7%, compared with 49% for Ms. Clinton and 27% for Mr. Giuliani. "The mayor is focused on continuing to move the city forward, not polls on a race he has no plans to enter," says a spokesman for Mr. Bloomberg. Rumors of his candidacy were triggered by comments from a former campaign adviser and by his appearances in California and Washington, D.C.

The poll results were particularly discouraging for George Pataki's prospects, and may explain recent signals from the former governor that he won't enter the race. A meager 7% of Republicans said they would vote for him in a primary, while Mr. Giuliani was favored by 54% and Mr. McCain by 16%. "If I were hired to offer advice, I might ask, `What is your base?' " Mr. Blumenthal says.

Packing up

Mr. Pataki has closed his New Hampshire office, postponed a decision on joining the race, and told supporters to consider other candidates if they didn't want to wait for him.

Ms. Clinton, in contrast, has no shortage of fans. One TriBeCa resident, Eric Oatman, 67, says he answered the poll questions, "Hillary all the way" because "she seems to be more committed to universal health care than the other candidates. Certainly she knows more about it."

What about Mr. Giuliani? "He was good after 9/11, but before that he was not my man. He just appears to be a very unpleasant man," Mr. Oatman says. "He's liberal enough, but for the national stage I just don't think he's proven himself by his actions here."

GETTING AN EARLY JUMP

If the 2008 general election for president were held today and the candidates were Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton, Republican Rudy Giuliani and independent Michael Bloomberg, for whom would you vote?

Hillary Rodham Clinton 49%

Rudy Giuliani 27%

Michael Bloomberg 7%

Additional results:

1% Would not vote

2% Other

14% Don’t know/No response/Refused to answer

Based on 600 responses. Source: Charney Research

RUDY TRAILS

If the 2008 general election for president were today and the candidates were Democrat Barack Obama andvRepublican Rudy Giuliani, for whom would you vote?

Barack Obama 42%

Rudy Giuliani 31%

Additional results:

5% Would not vote

2% Other

19% Don't know/No response/Refused to answer

Based on 600 responses. Percentages do not add up to 100 due to rounding. Source: Charney Research


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: electionpresident; elections; giuliani; giuliani2008; gop; hillaryequalsrudy; republicans; rmthread; rudyequalshillary
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To: Maverick68

She is SO unlikable!!! I was listening to her speech over the weekend, she was yelling as usual with that abrasive voice and it really seems people will get tired of her fast. She can't hide now, and when they see a lot of her they simply don't like her. The "packaging" by the media and the Dems is lost when she's out there on her own, facing the electorate.


21 posted on 02/12/2007 1:10:07 PM PST by BonnieJ
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To: The South Texan

nyc electorate: Come on, rudy's not so BAAAAaaaaaad.


22 posted on 02/12/2007 1:10:38 PM PST by DocH (Gun-grabbers, you can HAVE my guns... lead first.)
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To: nickcarraway

Rudy's too conservative for NY state.


23 posted on 02/12/2007 1:13:08 PM PST by My2Cents ("I support the right-ward most candidate who has a legitimate chance to win." -- W.F. Buckley)
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To: Ouderkirk
"For Clinton, her strength is her backside is broad and impressive, but the real question is, How deep is it?"
Good question......

A report from a focus group conducted by this polling outfit and what one observer had to say about it.

....I was hiding out behind a one-way mirror, watching a focus group run by superpollster Craig Charney, who has sampled voter opinion for everyone from Bill Clinton to Nelson Mandela......

In the end, only two group members said they were committed to the hometown candidate.

You can’t overgeneralize about one focus group, but this early reading of Hillary’s base suggests her support may be a mile wide — but, surprisingly, only an inch deep.


24 posted on 02/12/2007 1:18:34 PM PST by deport
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To: My2Cents
Rudy's too conservative for NY state.

Bullseye

25 posted on 02/12/2007 1:24:28 PM PST by zarf
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To: DocH

So, now you're saying that Rudy's a scumbag?


26 posted on 02/12/2007 1:26:10 PM PST by motzman (searching for the elusive chamelion...)
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To: Reagan Man

Yep, as expected, Rudy's not quite left enough so the witch wins by a whisker.


27 posted on 02/12/2007 1:27:39 PM PST by showme_the_Glory (No more rhyming, and I mean it! ..Anybody want a peanut.....)
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To: My2Cents; Spiff; Reagan Man
Rudy's too conservative for NY state.

So on one hand, ya'll are saying Rudy will put NY, NJ, PA and California in play for the GOP. And then you turn around and say he's too conservative for NY State.

Please make up your mind. This situational analysis is making the rest of us folks dizzy.

28 posted on 02/12/2007 1:27:43 PM PST by dirtboy (Duncan Hunter 08)
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To: My2Cents

Rudy's too conservative for NY state.



In a statewide race and against the Democrat that is probably true....... but as the article above references Giuliani will blow any Republican competition away in the primary if he is in the race.....

.....Mr. Giuliani would trounce Mr. McCain in a state Republican primary, according to the poll.


29 posted on 02/12/2007 1:28:13 PM PST by deport
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To: Reagan Man

No doubt many NYers long for Dinkin's Time.


30 posted on 02/12/2007 1:29:28 PM PST by OldFriend (Swiftboating - Sinking a politician's Ship of Fools by Torpedoes of Truth)
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To: dirtboy
>>>>>>Please make up your mind. This situational analysis is making the rest of us folks dizzy.

LMBO WOOHOO!

31 posted on 02/12/2007 1:29:31 PM PST by Reagan Man (Conservatives don't vote for liberals.)
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To: zarf; My2Cents
Rudy's too conservative for NY state.

Bullseye

If Rudy can't carry NY, (I'm just sayin) where would he run strong?

32 posted on 02/12/2007 1:30:22 PM PST by Ramcat (Thank You American Veterans)
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To: Reagan Man

So Hillary! cleans up in what is arguably the most 'Rat-infested state in the country? Big shock there.


33 posted on 02/12/2007 1:31:38 PM PST by chimera
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To: Reagan Man

If you believe this, I have a bridge you might like to buy...


34 posted on 02/12/2007 1:31:42 PM PST by hershey
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To: Reagan Man

Hillary strikes fear into the hearts of her enemies. Never underestimate the power of fear. Saddam understood it well.


35 posted on 02/12/2007 1:32:16 PM PST by TChris (The Democrat Party: A sewer into which is emptied treason, inhumanity and barbarism - O. Morton)
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To: Reagan Man

Here's a poll question I'd like to see answered, even a state poll of 600 likely New York voters:

Would you vote for a person who ignored the threat of terrorists for 8 years while she was co-president?

Would you vote for a person who ran away from any opportunities to reform and extend the major "entitlements" so many in the middle class depend upon (Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid)?

Would you vote for a person who allowed government secrets to be given away to Red China in exchange for campaign donations? Who sold overnights in the Lincoln bedroom for political support? Who repaid donations with presidential pardons?

Would you vote for a person who was co-president when we opted for a nuclear arms treaty with North Korea (only to find that they started violating it 24 hours after the ink was dry)?

Would you vote for a person who tried (and failed) to come up with a nationalized healthcare plan that would have put Canada to shame? What if I told you that her investment advisor (managing her "blind trust") was shorting the stocks of pharmaceutical companies and health management companies while she was planning the takeover of the health care industry?

Would you vote for the person who "wants to take all the profits from the oil companies" and give it to government bureaucrats to "come up with alternative energy sources"?

That's the poll I would like to see taken.


36 posted on 02/12/2007 1:36:47 PM PST by ReleaseTheHounds (“The demagogue is one who preaches doctrines he knows to be untrue to men he knows to be idiots.”)
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To: Reagan Man

Kind of like choosing your own form of execution. "Well Sir shall it be the Hangman's Noose, The Marksman's Rifle, or the Garote?"


37 posted on 02/12/2007 1:40:48 PM PST by Domicile of Doom (Center amber dot on head and squeeze for best results)
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To: motzman
So, now you're saying that Rudy's a scumbag?

I'm sorry. I meant to say that he's...

a northeastern-corridor, inner-city, gun-grabbing, abortion-supporting, liberal RINO SCUMBAG.

Hope that made things more clear for you.

38 posted on 02/12/2007 1:41:16 PM PST by DocH (Gun-grabbers, you can HAVE my guns... lead first.)
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Comment #39 Removed by Moderator

To: NYleatherneck
you are right, but maybe not for the reasons you think- In order to commit enought fraud to win, Hilliary only has to fudge the votes in 3 places- the three just mentioned.

I always thought that was the case in the last election because more people voted for Hilliary than voted for W. That means someone who voted for Bush had to also vote for Hilliary at the same time, and can you imagine anyone who wanted Bush ALSO voting for Hilliary

40 posted on 02/12/2007 1:43:52 PM PST by Mr. K
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