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GOP leading in top two races - Texas Senate and Governor Races
The Dallas Morning News ^ | October 20, 2002 | By WAYNE SLATER / The Dallas Morning News

Posted on 10/19/2002 10:51:53 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP


GOP leading in top two races

10/20/2002

By WAYNE SLATER / The Dallas Morning News

AUSTIN - Republicans seeking the state's top offices hold a double-digit lead over their Democratic opponents, but undecided voters still could narrow the gap with less than three weeks until Election Day.

Gov. Rick Perry is favored by 50 percent of likely voters over Laredo businessman Tony Sanchez, backed by 35 percent in the latest poll by The Dallas Morning News.

In the Senate race, Republican John Cornyn leads former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk by 10 points.

The Democrats' best chance in the Nov. 5 election is former Comptroller John Sharp, locked in a dead heat with GOP Land Commissioner David Dewhurst.

By the Numbers

Voter support for governor, senate

Voter support for lt. governor, attorney general

Breakdown by race, gender

The attorney general's race also is close, with Republican Greg Abbott leading Democrat Kirk Watson by 6 percentage points, but more than a quarter of likely voters are undecided.

"It's a good time to be a Republican running for office in Texas," said pollster Micheline Blum.

"What's happened in Texas is that almost half of all likely voters think of themselves now as Republicans," she said. "So you can't win anymore with just the Democrats and a chunk of the independents."

Part of the Democratic political blueprint is to boost turnout among minority voters with a historic ticket. Mr. Kirk would be the first black U.S. senator from the South since Reconstruction, and Mr. Sanchez would be the state's first Hispanic governor.

Coupled with Mr. Sanchez's deep pockets - $54 million of his own money already spent - Democrat leaders hope to energize voters and get them to the polls in record numbers.

Ms. Blum and colleague Julie Weprin said their survey suggests little evidence that the so-called dream team ticket has kindled sufficient enthusiasm to offset its lagging support among whites.

"That's obviously a real blow to Sanchez," Ms. Blum said. "He needs to be taking the overwhelming number of Hispanic votes. Plus he needs the enthusiasm of people getting out in droves to help him do well. And we don't see either one."

She said Mr. Kirk is doing far better among blacks than Hispanics.

"The problem is there isn't a black-Hispanic coalition," she said. "He's not getting anywhere near as much of the Hispanic vote as one might have expected or that he needs to get."

With three weeks to go, the GOP leads could dwindle as voters who say they're still undecided - especially minorities who likely would flow to the Sanchez and Kirk camps - make a decision.

For example, in the governor's race, 21 percent of black voters and 18 percent of Hispanics are undecided. By comparison, only one in 10 white voters has not picked a candidate.

If the undecided voters cast their ballots overwhelmingly for Democrats, the margins would narrow for Mr. Sanchez and Mr. Kirk. But there still wouldn't be enough votes to win without a record-breaking turnout among minorities, the pollsters said.

"Sanchez needs all the undecideds, plus at this point he needs to take a vote away from Perry," Ms. Weprin said. "Perry has his 50 percent."

"Kirk is closer," said Ms. Blum.

The poll, conducted Sunday through Thursday by Blum & Weprin Associates Inc. of New York, interviewed 953 likely voters by telephone. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points, meaning the total for each candidate can vary that much in either direction.

The candidates offered predictably different views of the survey results, Republicans casting them as consistent with their own polling and Democrats dismissing them as flawed.

"This poll, like most public polls, is wrong," said Sanchez spokesman Mark Sanders. He said pollsters are underrepresenting minorities and voter enthusiasm.

"We show this a very, very, very close race," he said.

Ray Sullivan, a Perry spokesman, said the survey mirrors "virtually every independent public poll and is a strong endorsement of Gov. Perry's leadership record."

Cornyn spokesman Dave Beckwith said he's not surprised his candidate is ahead, and he predicted the lead would grow.

Kirk spokesman Justin Lonon said, "There will be a lot of polls between now and Election Day. This will be a close, competitive race, and we look forward to being successful on Election Day."

Mixed results

Among the poll's findings:

Voters are divided over which gubernatorial candidate is better equipped to rein in soaring insurance rates, a cornerstone of Mr. Sanchez's campaign. Of likely voters, 37 percent say Mr. Perry would do a better job, 33 percent pick Mr. Sanchez.

Although Mr. Cornyn, the state attorney general, has touted his support of President Bush, 51 percent of voters say it would not be a factor in their decision.

In a contest marked by millions of dollars of attack ads on television, voters say Mr. Sanchez is running a more negative campaign. According to the survey, 37 percent said Mr. Sanchez was the nastiest, 26 percent said Mr. Perry and 22 percent said they were equally to blame.

Mr. Cornyn and Mr. Kirk have maintained a relatively high positive rating among voters, but Mr. Perry's approval has fallen over the last seven months of the acrimonious campaign. About 57 percent give Mr. Perry a favorable rating compared with 36 percent for Mr. Sanchez.

"Sanchez has got a big problem," Ms. Blum said. "It's so partisan. While Democrats and independents think more favorably of Sanchez, he gets a 17 percent favorable among Republicans."

'Razor-thin' margins

The contest for lieutenant governor is so close either candidate would win, the pollsters said.

"It's razor-thin," Ms. Blum said. "Sharp does well among many more groups than the other Democrats running in any of the other contests."

Even among Republicans, Mr. Sharp gets a relatively high one-fifth of the vote, the survey shows.

"If Sanchez can pull out more Hispanic votes, it helps Sharp more than anybody," she said. "If there's a big Hispanic turnout, it might not put Sanchez over the top, but it could put Sharp over."

Kelly Fero, a Sharp spokesman, said the campaign's polling shows the Democrat with a lead of five to six points over Mr. Dewhurst.

But Nick Voinis of the Dewhurst campaign predicted victory, saying, "The only poll that really matters is on Nov. 5."

The race for attorney general between Mr. Abbott, a former Supreme Court justice, and Mr. Watson, a former Austin mayor, has the most undecided voters.

The pollster said that because of the lack of familiarity with these office-seekers, party identification is the key factor, with independents split and up for grabs.

Staff writer George Kuempel contributed to this report.

E-mail wslater@dallasnews.com


Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/latestnews/stories/102002dntexdmnpoll.3b1f5.html


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: gopleading; johncornyn; rickperry; ronkirk; texas; texasgovernorrace; texassenaterace; tonysanchez
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To: ambrose
Dewurst seems to be doing poorly in comparison to the other statewide Republicans. How is he as a campaigner and position wise?

David is a FINE man and a TRUE conservative who came up hard and managed to do very well for himself in the business world. His political problem, for those who consider that he HAS one, stems from the fact that he stands on principal and CANNOT be bought! As you might imagine, this scares the HELL out of a great many!

41 posted on 10/19/2002 2:21:54 PM PDT by Bigun
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To: No dems 2002
Some info I've read recently but can't give you link to where it was.....

Historically the black - hispanic vote runs about 15 & 12% )(27%) of the total vote in Texas. The Democrats were pushing to up the percentage to about 35% total thus reducing the percentage needed from the Anglo vote. It will be interesting to see what the numbers look like after Nov. 5

42 posted on 10/19/2002 2:26:27 PM PDT by deport
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To: Alissa
I'll vote sometime early next week.... Maybe get to be in line with the rest/nursing home folks on their voting outing. LOL. They often get a ride to one of the stores hosting the voting location and get a little shopping done, courtesy of the free transportation provided by the democrats.
43 posted on 10/19/2002 2:29:33 PM PDT by deport
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To: Yankereb
Dewhurst will get my vote, as will all GOP - and NO 'RAT will !!




I'm a GOOD 'RAT !



44 posted on 10/19/2002 3:48:36 PM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: BlackRazor
bump
45 posted on 10/19/2002 7:58:12 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: NYS_Eric
The weird stat here is that females prefer Perry over Sanchez more than males.

Perry's a babe magnet.

At least, that's what my wife says.

46 posted on 10/19/2002 8:06:19 PM PDT by sinkspur
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To: sinkspur
More poll numbers for those inclined from RealClear Politics:

Senatah:

Texas (Open)                                                  Leans GOP
Poll
Date
Cornyn (R)
Kirk (D)
Spread
10/14-10/16
54%
42%
GOP +12
10/8-10/13
46%
36%
GOP +10
Zogby
10/9-10/11
45%
37%
GOP +8
9/30-10/6
56%
30%
GOP +26
Survey USA
9/30-10/2
54%
42%
GOP +12
Last 3 Polls
Average
48.3%
38.3%
GOP +10.0

The three most recent polls confirms Cornyn has a solid 10 point lead in this race. With President Bush as his trump card, it is very hard to see how Cornyn is not going to win this race.



Guvnah:

Texas                                                                  Safe GOP
Poll
Date
Perry (R)
Sanchez (D)
Spread
10/14-10/16
52%
43%
GOP +9
10/8-10/13
48%
34%
GOP +14
10/9-10/11
52%
30%
GOP +22
10/1-10/3
44%
41%
GOP +3
9/30-10/6
56%
29%
GOP +27
Average
50.2%
35.6%
GOP 14.6

The NBC 5, Survey USA and Zogby poll shows Perry has solid control over this race. The Sanchez campaign took a further hit when Dan Morales, a prominent Hispanic-American Democrat and Sanchez's primary opponent,publicly endorsed Perry at a campaign stop in Houston. Sanchez says he will spend millions more of his own money over the next few weeks to try and make this race close. Don't count on it happening.

FGS

47 posted on 10/19/2002 11:37:06 PM PDT by ForGod'sSake
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To: ForGod'sSake
Alrighty then, so I forgot to fill in the ""'s... RealClear Politics. So there.

FGS

48 posted on 10/19/2002 11:40:40 PM PDT by ForGod'sSake
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To: sinkspur; deport; Dog Gone; Bigun; BillyW
Hey Sink, just why did the Worth Star-Telegram and Houston Chronicle endorse Kirk? (That was posted on another site; if it ain't true, well, whatever.) They aren't lib papers are they, or are they? Given all of Kirk's problems, that really surprises me. Kirk may be a genial chap, who will try to keep his liberal tendencies under wraps, and only vote for the Dem party line when his vote is really needed (you know how that works), but Kirk doesn't really seem ready for prime time to me.

I invite comment from other Texas political junkies as well.

49 posted on 10/20/2002 12:37:16 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/772453/posts?page=23#23

and the Sharp endorsement just a few post down from the above Kirk endorsement.....

Houston Chronicle isn't a conservative paper, but the did endorse Perry over Sanchez
50 posted on 10/20/2002 12:41:42 PM PDT by deport
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To: deport
I found the editorial you linked interesting because it was all about Kirk, and didn't mention the Pubbie by name once, or compare and contrast. I have never read an endorsement like that before, have you?
51 posted on 10/20/2002 12:49:23 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
The Fort Worth Star Telegram is the home paper for Molly Ivins. It endorsed Clinton both times he ran.

I'm not surprised it endorsed Kirk. I didn't read it this morning, however; it was so wet when I went out to get it, that I just threw the paper in the trash.

Guess I didn't miss much.

52 posted on 10/20/2002 1:21:34 PM PDT by sinkspur
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To: Torie
...just why did the Worth Star-Telegram and Houston Chronicle endorse Kirk?

Star-Telegram is home to the well-known right wing columnist Molly Ivans and ALWAYS endorses liberals!

Houston Comical err Chronicle is an arm of the DNC.

No surprise in either of those endorsements!

53 posted on 10/20/2002 3:11:53 PM PDT by Bigun
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