Posted on 02/26/2007 3:44:39 PM PST by areafiftyone
Released: February 26, 2007
Hillary Holds On; Giuliani Expands Lead in National Primary Tests
Obama advances, but McCain fades in partisan contests; Obama, Giuliani do best in general election match-ups
New York Sen. Hillary Clinton clings to a shrinking lead over Illinois Senator Barack Obama in a national test of Democratic primary voter preference, while Republican Rudy Giuliani is expanding his edge over John McCain, the maverick senator from Arizona, a new Zogby International telephone poll shows.
The survey was the first since last weeks very public spat between the Clinton and Obama campaigns over Hollywood fundraising and the conduct of the first Clinton administration.
The telephone survey, which asked Democrats, Republicans, and nonaligned voters in which primary or caucus they planned to vote next year, was conducted Feb. 2224, 2007, and included 1,078 likely voters (397 Republicans - MOE: +/- 5.0 percentage points, 439 Democrats - MOE: +/- 4.8 percentage points). The survey's overall margin of error was +/- 3.0 percentage points.
Among those who said they would vote in the Democratic primary or caucus for President, Clinton leads with 33% support, up 4% from our last telephone survey in early January. However, Obama has made dramatic gains in the last six weeks, moving from 14% support to 25% backing. Former North Carolina Sen. John Edward is a distant third, winning 12% support. One in five said they were undecided about which Democratic candidate to support.
Democrats |
Republicans |
Clinton 33% |
Giuliani 29% |
Obama 25% |
McCain 20% |
Edwards 12% |
Romney 9% |
Richardson 5% |
Rice 7% |
Biden 2% |
Gingrich 7% |
Clark 1% |
Brownback 4% |
Someone else 3% |
Tancredo 1% |
Not sure 20% |
Hunter 1% |
|
Someone else 4% |
|
Not sure 19% |
On the Republican side, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has extended his lead over McCain, leading 29% to 20% in our latest polling. Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who had a successful career in business before entering politics, placed a distant third on the GOP side of the fence. Nearly one in five Republican primary or caucus participants (19%) said they were unsure about whom to support.
Giuliani led McCain in our early January survey, 21% to 17%.
In the Democratic race, Clinton wins solid support among older voters, while Obama has the edge among younger counterparts. Clinton holds a 31% to 24% edge among white Democratic voters, while Obama leads among AfricanAmericans, 36% to 27%. Progressives gave the nod to Obama, while moderates favored Clinton. The two were deadlocked at 30% support among male Democratic voters, but Clinton led among women, 34% to 22%.
In a measurement of how firm the support is for the candidates overall, Clintons support is just a bit weaker than that of Obama. A slight majority of Clinton supporters 54% said they are likely to change their minds before they actually cast a primary or caucus vote, while 48% of Obama supporters agreed. While his overall support lags, Edwards appears to have strongminded backers: just 28% said they are likely to jump from the Edwards ship over the course of the next year.
Republican Giuliani is favored in nearly every age bracket, the Zogby telephone survey shows. He leads in all groups. McCain comes close only among those age 5064, where the former New York mayors lead narrows to a 24% to 21% edge. More than one in four in that specific age group said they were yet undecided whom to support.
Among those Republican voters who consider themselves very conservative, Romney wins 23%, compared to 22% for former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich. The muchballyhooed very conservative vote is split even more among secondtier candidates, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice winning 13% support and Sen. Sam Brownback winning 9%. Giuliani (4%) and McCain (3%) failed to win more than token support among this demographic.
General Election MatchUps Show Obama Strength
The Zogby International survey also tested several combinations of possible 2008 presidential general election matchups, pairing the top three candidates from each party:
Giuliani 47%, Clinton 40% |
Giuliani 40%, Obama 46% |
Giuliani 46%, Edwards 40% |
McCain 47%, Clinton 39% |
McCain 40%, Obama 44% |
McCain 47%, Edwards 38% |
Romney 35%, Clinton 45% |
Romney 29%, Obama 51% |
Romney 32%, Edwards 47% |
While 32% gave Bush positive marks for his overall job performance, 68% gave him negative ratings. Older Americans were more likely to give him slightly better ratings than younger counterparts, the survey shows. While 61% of Republicans gave him positive marks, just 9% of Democrats and 26% of selfdescribed independents awarded the President a positive job approval rating.
Overall, just 23% support the Presidents handling of the war in Iraq, while 35% said the Iraq war has been worth the loss of American lives.
For a detailed methodological statement on this survey, please visit:
http://www.zogby.com/methodology/readmeth.dbm?ID=1172
(2/26/2007)
It's neat that it made you interested in him rather than scaring you away(s). This is a great article if you want to know more about Guiliani:
I don't support Rudy, but I'll predict that he will get the nomination, as will Hillary and Rudy will beat Hillary in the general.
All this assumes no scandals or Macaca moments.
No MSM pushovers here!
This media-shift is in its infancy, but the MSM is disintegrating, and its message as propaganda is fast diminishing.
I think it's overstated because it is, at this early stage, purely a reflection of image and hype. Obama is an unknown. There is an empty suit to exploit, waiting in the wings.
One commercial showing Obama's face fading to a mosque call to prayer will take care of his candidacy.
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