Posted on 08/11/2015 11:34:13 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I’m not telling you these polls are correct, just like I didn’t tell you yesterday that that bombshell Morning Consult survey showing Trump rising to 32 percent after the debate was correct. We’re tracking all of the polls this week to see what the consensus says, as that’ll be a reasonably good indicator of where the race really stands right now.
The good news for Trump fans via Rasmussen: He’s still leading the field. The bad news: For the first time since the start of Trumpmania, he’s losing ground rather than gaining it.
The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds Trump with 17% support among Likely Republican Primary Voters, down from 26% in late July before the first GOP debate. Senator Marco Rubio and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush are in second place with 10% support each, in a near tie with Fiorina and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker who both earn nine percent (9%) of the likely primary vote…
Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard and the candidate generally viewed as the winner of the B-level debate last Thursday evening, has jumped eight points from one percent (1%) support in the previous survey…
Rubio has doubled his level of support from five percent (5%) in late July. Carson has gained slightly. Walker has fallen back five points, while support for Bush and Cruz has held steady.
Fiorina and Rubio both had strong debates on Thursday so an accurate poll should, one would think, show them building support since last week. That’s what Rasmussen shows, to the point where Carly’s now in the top five. Moreover, one of the theories by Trump naysayers about his polling is that it’s deceptive insofar as it’s picking up (in some cases) supporters who are unlikely to actually vote in the Republican primaries. Ask an average American adult who’s not politically engaged who he/she prefers in a field of Donald Trump and 16 unknowns and you’re likely to hear “Donald Trump” in reply — even if that person has no intention of casting a ballot. Rasmussen seeks to control for that by polling only likely Republican voters. Within that group, they’re finding a nearly 10-point drop for Trump since last week.
That’s not the only poll out today with bad news, though. Suffolk polled Iowa and found Trump still leading there at 17 percent, which is in line with how we was doing in several pre-debate polls there over the last few weeks. Among people who watched the debate, though, the results were ominous:
When asked if Trump was targeted unfairly by Fox’s moderators, 54 percent said no. When asked who was the most impressive at the debate, 23 percent said Marco Rubio, 22 percent said Ben Carson, and 11 percent said Ted Cruz. Slightly less than 11 percent said Trump. (For what it’s worth, despite Carson disappearing during the debate for long stretches, I’ve heard several conservative friends say how impressed they were with him. If Trumpmania begins to fizzle, Carson may be the guy who starts picking up Trump’s “no more politics as usual” support despite the fact that they’re polar opposites in personality.) Although Trump’s favorable rating in Iowa is now net positive at 45/37, he’s far behind his most serious competitors there in that metric: Scott Walker is at 73/13, Rubio is at 72/12, Carson is at 78/7(!), and Cruz is at 64/17. Quote:
It appears that Donald Trumps lead is strong so long as the number of active opponents remains above a dozen, said David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center in Boston. If the Republican field were winnowed down to five or six candidates, Trumps 17 percent probably wouldnt be enough to win in Iowa, as polling indicates that his further growth has limitations. The long-shot candidates staying in the race help keep Trump on topat least for now.
One more poll for you, this from another early state. The Boston Herald and Franklin Pierce University polled New Hampshire after the debate and found, once again, Trump still in the lead. But he wasn’t the big mover this time — and his support was noticeably lower than it’s been in other recent NH polls:
.@bostonherald @FPUniversity NH #FITN poll: @realDonaldTrump 18%, @JebBush 13%, @JohnKasich 12%, @tedcruz 10%, surging @CarlyFiorina 9%.
— Jen Miller (@jenbmiller) August 11, 2015
The last four polls in New Hampshire had Trump at 21, 24, 24, and 32 points; this is the first time he’s been below 20 since late June. No crosstabs available yet, but presumably it’s the rising Kasich and Fiorina who have gobbled up some of his support. Kasich’s strategy, a la Jon Huntsman, is to all but skip Iowa and camp out in New Hampshire, hoping to stun the establishment frontrunner in the primary there next year and launch himself into serious contention for the nomination. Nate Cohn of the NYT looked at that Herald poll this morning and wondered if this month will be remembered in hindsight not for Trumpmania but as the month when Kasich became a serious enough contender in New Hampshire to threaten Jeb Bush. If you’re a Trump fan who’s bummed out about his new numbers, take some comfort in that. If Kasich cuts deeply enough into Jeb’s take in NH, it could enable some other candidate to sneak through to victory, all but destroying Bush’s campaign before it gets going. Second look at Kasich?
If Trump is indeed down, it’s because he’s starting to go soft.
Rasmussen’s a loser!
Morning Consult seems to be an outlier.
People at FR used to love Rasmussen. Probably not so much now. I wonder if this still holds?
Or will it now be called a stupid polling outfit or a failing polling outfit?
And a failing polling outfit, too. Don’t forget that! All are losers except for Trump! /s.
Dominate the news ad nauseum about fighting with women and blood coming from somewhere? and the public will begin to tune you out.
Facts don't matter in our media circus.
The poll shows the Fox debate team failed in taking Trump out.
He is still leading. Big time.
Another anti illegal immigration speech and this will be laughable.
Going personal on Megyn Kelly was a big mistake however if he pivots and talks issues (illegal immigration) he’ll bounce back up.
somehow I can’t see someone who was impressed by Trump switching to Pastor Kasich or Librarian iCarly
Really? Really?
I shall name them “squishy”
Good news for Trump though
Shows him the belligerent tit-for-tat namecalling act is wearing thin and get back to issues, which is what booted him to the front of the sled dog team
Cruz is an actual conservative, is tough, and isn't an a-hole about it.
Megyn Kelly’s attack on him reflected bad on her. His attack on her afterwards was dumb and reflected badly on him.
I love what he says. I still don’t know how conservative he is on social positions, and a total narcisist (not too far from Obama).
I hope someone like Ted Cruz takes the flag and keeps running the marathon. Not quite yet as Trump is doing a great job protecting the rest of the conservatives from the wrath of the liberal media.
RE: People at FR used to love Rasmussen. Probably not so much now.
They were quite inaccurate in 2012 if memory serves me right.
“Overexposure is the media tactic.”
So your hypothesis is that Trump would have preferred not to have the spotlight on himself, but the wily media outfoxed him.
Rasmussen Reports is not the outfit that we all remember it to be.
-PJ
Not so much.
The Suffolk University poll finds that by a 2-1 (55-23%) margin among likely GOP voters (the gold standard), and not the Republican, Republican-leaning registered voters in the Morning Consult poll (not the gold standard) voters felt less comfortable voting for Trump. 55% are now less comfortable voting for Trump
As well, this Suffolk poll found that 54% said they did not believe that the Fox News moderators were unfair to Trump, whereas only 41% felt they were unfair to Trump.
So I guess that 55% and 54% are all stupid now and failures, too?
Trump’s support will all wind up with Cruz, who is just as outspoken, but a lot smarter.
If that's true, why this?
Uh oh: Trump down nine points after debate in new Rasmussen national poll
Remember, he's not telling you it's true. Bwa ha ha ha ha...
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