Posted on 05/02/2014 1:29:51 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
A mini-bombshell from the Daily Caller. The only poll of the race taken before this came at the start of April and had Monica Wehby trailing Jeff Merkley by 12 points. A month later, the Caller finds her up 40/39 among “active voters,” i.e. newly registered voters plus longtime registered voters who voted in one of the last two elections. What’s changed? Maybe nothing; with so few polls to go by, it could be that one of these is an outlier. Or, it could be that Wehby’s much-praised “Trust” ad that made the rounds a few weeks ago raised her name recognition enough to make her competitive with a weak incumbent.
The Caller’s headline for this story is “Wave Year?”, with good reason. If we see another poll like this out of Oregon, I might have to break out the old “Waterloo” video.
Wehby, a Portland-based pediatric neurosurgeon, received the support of 40 percent of respondents, while an additional five percent say they are leaning towards supporting the first-time candidate. Merkley, who was elected to the Senate in 2008, garners the support of just 39 percent of respondents, with two percent saying they lean towards supporting him…
The poll also indicates that a plurality of voters in the deep-blue state see Obamacare as a mostly failed venture. Forty-six percent of respondents said Obamacare and Cover Oregon, the states disastrously flawed health care exchange, were failures, while 17 percent said they were successes, and 37 percent said they were somewhere in between.
Wehby, a moderate, just landed Mitt Romney’s endorsement. Peek into the crosstabs and you’ll see some numbers that look off, like Wehby trailing Merkley by less than six points among black voters and leading Merkley by nearly 10 points among Latinos in a very Democratic state. What’s up with that? As a few people on Twitter pointed out, it’s a function of the state’s demographics: Oregon is overwhelmingly white, which means that subsamples involving blacks and Latinos in polls of the state will necessarily be tiny and involve a large margin of error. Merkley’s surely leading Wehby comfortably among both demographics in reality — but because those demographics are such a small part of the overall electorate, the error doesn’t affect the topline numbers much.
This is interesting, though:
As you saw in the “Trust” ad and as you’ll see again below, advertising for Wehby is aimed squarely at peeling off women voters from Merkley. In fact, though, she’s crushing him among men and trails (albeit not badly) among women. If her ad strategy starts to work and she can keep it close among women, Merkley’s done. The only thing that might save him under those circumstances is a turnaround in the ObamaCare numbers — and remember, when it comes to O-Care, Oregon’s no ordinary state.
The effect of term limits is to kick out the conservatives that created them, giving room to Democrats that win and then eliminate term limits.
liberal vs liberal
why should we care who wins?
I just got a robo-call of Mitt Romney supporting Wehby. That’s not exactly how to earn my primary vote.
I’m voting Conger in the primary over Wehby. In the general I’ll vote for anyone but merkley.
Good ad
I’d not vote at all before voting for a liberal of either party
Do you reside in Oregon? I do. I am voting for Wehby based on Congers track record of voting with Dems on many things in the State legislature. Conger cannot beat Merkley.
thank god I don’t live in a state like that. :p
Yeah...it’s a mess...Dems have been in charge for about 30 years...This year MAY bring change...but the vote fraud may be the problem.
Conger!
Personally if I were in Oregon (mind you I live on the opposite coast in N.C.) I’d support this guy: http://callahanfororegon.com/
He has guts as witnessed in the latest video showing MSM bias!~
J.S.
Only concern I have: It’s 6 more months until the General Election. Anything can happen. IMO, polls are useless at this stage of the game.
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.