Posted on 02/01/2007 9:16:46 AM PST by areafiftyone
February 01, 2007
Giuliani, McCain Have Competing Strengths in Republicans' EyesMcCain's strengths lie in foreign policy, ethics, and moral values; Giuliani's on domestic issues and leadership
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GALLUP NEWS SERVICE
PRINCETON, NJ -- A recent Gallup Panel poll shows Rudy Giuliani and John McCain the clear frontrunners among the Republican Party's 2008 presidential hopefuls. In the most recent test of rank-and-file Republicans' presidential nomination preferences, 31% said they would be most likely to support Giuliani and 27% said McCain. When asked to choose between the two, however, Republicans show a slight preference for Giuliani at 50% to 42%, respectively.
The latest poll sought to explore Republicans' views of Giuliani and McCain in more depth, asking them to choose which candidate better exemplified certain personality or political characteristics as well as say who would be better able to handle specific issues.
The results show Giuliani enjoys a remarkably strong image relative to McCain in terms of his likability. Nearly three-quarters of Republicans say Giuliani is the more likable candidate; only 21% choose McCain. Additionally, Giuliani has wide leads over McCain for handling crime, doing the better job in a crisis, uniting the country, understanding the problems of ordinary Americans, being the better public speaker, and being the stronger leader. McCain's strengths center on his handling of moral values issues, his ability to handle most foreign policy issues, and his ethical standards -- but his leads are much weaker than Giuliani's top strengths in terms of magnitude.
Giuliani is currently viewed as the candidate more likely to win the presidential election though Republicans are divided as to which candidate has the better chance of winning the party's presidential nomination. People are also relatively closely divided in their assessment of whether McCain or Giuliani is more qualified to be president -- though McCain has a slight edge on this. Candidate Characteristics
The Jan. 25-28, 2007 poll asked Republicans and independents who say they lean to the Republican Party to rate Giuliani versus McCain on each of 15 specific issue characteristics [a similar analysis was done of Democratic candidates: see "Clinton Eclipses Obama and Edwards on Leadership" in the Related Items]. Of the 15 characteristics tested, Giuliani is viewed as having a clear advantage on 10 items. McCain "wins" on only three dimensions, and the two candidates are essentially tied on the remaining two.
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Republicans' Ratings of Giuliani and McCain |
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% |
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% |
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Is more likeable |
74 |
21 |
G, +53 |
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Would be better in a crisis |
68 |
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28 |
G, +40 |
Would do more to unite the |
65 |
28 |
G, +37 |
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Is the better public speaker |
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61 |
27 |
G, +34 |
Better understands the |
60 |
33 |
G, +27 |
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Is the stronger leader |
59 |
34 |
G, +25 |
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Would perform better in the |
56 |
37 |
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G, +19 |
Would manage the |
55 |
37 |
G, +18 |
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Has the better chance of |
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55 |
38 |
G, +17 |
Would run the more positive |
50 |
38 |
G, +12 |
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Has the better chance of |
47 |
46 |
G, +1 |
Would be respected more by |
45 |
45 |
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Tie |
Is more qualified to be |
41 |
50 |
M, +9 |
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Would work better with |
41 |
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52 |
M, +11 |
Has higher ethical standards |
35 |
50 |
M, +15 |
Giuliani's greatest strength vis a vis McCain comes on the following dimensions on which he has at least a 20-point lead over the Arizona Senator:
Giuliani does better than McCain, albeit with a slightly smaller lead, on the following:
The two candidates are essentially tied in terms of these characteristics:
Republicans give McCain the advantage on these dimensions:
Overall, Giuliani appears to be very well-positioned against McCain on many relevant and important dimensions.
Significantly, of course, it is important to note that McCain is viewed by Republicans as more qualified to be president than Giuliani. His strength on working better with Congress undoubtedly flows from his own experience as a U.S. Representative from 1983-1986 and as a U.S. Senator since 1987. McCain's strength on the basis of ethical standards may result both from his own background and questions about Giuliani's business activities since the end of his mayorship of New York City as well as the events surrounding his recent divorce and re-marriage.
But Giuliani's perceived strengths are many, and the distance between Giuliani and McCain on some of these dimensions is very large. For example, there is a 53-point gap in the percent who choose the former New York City mayor made "more likable" compared to McCain and a 37-point gap on the dimension of "most likely to unite the country." Candidates on the Issues
The poll also asked Republicans to indicate which of the two potential candidates would do the better job on a series of 10 issues. [The same analysis for the Democratic candidates can be found in the Related Items: "Clinton Eclipses Obama and Edwards on Leadership."]
Giuliani has an advantage on six of the issues tested and McCain has an advantage on four. Giuliani's strengths are primarily in the area of domestic issues while McCain leads on most international matters.
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Republicans' Ratings of Giuliani and McCain on Issues January 2007 Gallup Poll |
Giuliani |
McCain |
Advantage |
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% |
% |
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Crime |
78 |
17 |
G, +61 |
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The economy |
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52 |
38 |
G, +14 |
Terrorism |
53 |
41 |
G, +12 |
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Taxes |
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49 |
37 |
G, +12 |
Education |
48 |
38 |
G, +10 |
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Healthcare |
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47 |
39 |
G, +8 |
Energy and the environment |
43 |
44 |
M, +1 |
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The situation in Iraq |
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40 |
53 |
M, +13 |
Relations with other countries |
37 |
54 |
M, +17 |
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Moral values issues |
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30 |
58 |
M, +28 |
Giuliani's biggest advantage is on crime, for which 78% of Republicans view him as better compared with 17% who say McCain is. Giuliani, a federal prosecutor prior to being elected mayor of New York City, made crime prevention a focus during his administration and crime rates in the city did fall during his tenure.
Giuliani is also viewed as better than McCain on the economy (52% to 38%), education (48% to 38%), healthcare (47% to 39%), and taxes (49% to 37%). The candidates are rated about equally on the environment and energy with 44% saying McCain would do a better job and 43% Giuliani.
McCain, who has long supported an increased U.S. military presence in Iraq, is viewed by Republicans as better to handle the situation in Iraq by a 53% to 40% margin over Giuliani. (Giuliani has supported recent calls for a troop increase in Iraq.) Republicans also give McCain a 54% to 37% edge on handling "relations with other countries."
One international issue in Giuliani's favor is terrorism, on which he has a 53% to 41% edge over McCain. Giuliani's widely praised response to the Sept. 11 terror attacks while serving as mayor of New York City is the likely reason for this -- and is enough to overcome the perhaps more general sense that McCain is better on international matters.
McCain's biggest issue advantage is not on an international issue, but on moral values. Fifty-eight percent of Republicans believe he would do the better job on this issue while 30% believe Giuliani would. Giuliani's past positions in favor of abortion and gay rights are generally out of step with the views of most rank-and-file Republicans while McCain's positions have generally been in keeping with the Republican platform.
Republicans' relative ratings of the candidates on the issues do not vary much by their religious commitment or self-described political ideology. Bottom Line
Unlike the Democratic candidates, where Hillary Clinton is clearly the dominant candidate in terms of voter preferences, character dimensions, and issue positioning, the Republicans show more delineation between their leading candidates. Giuliani is viewed favorably by Republicans on key dimensions such as leadership, likability, and electability, while McCain has equally important strengths on foreign policy aptitude, moral values issues, and integrity. But Giuliani's advantages on his strongest issues and characteristics (61 points on crime, 53 points on likability, 40 points on handling a crisis) are much greater than McCain's (28 points on moral values, 15 points on ethical standards).
The poll provides insight into where the candidates stand among the party before campaigning kicks off in earnest -- while both McCain and Giuliani have formed presidential candidate exploratory committees, neither has officially announced his candidacy. McCain would do well to emphasize his experience and foreign policy credentials while reminding Republican voters of his traditional views on moral values. Meanwhile, Giuliani apparently would be well-served to remind the voters of his leadership of New York following the Sept. 11 crisis and attempt to capitalize on his more favorable public image. Survey Methods
Results for this Gallup Panel study are based on telephone interviews with 441 Republicans and Republican leaners, aged 18 and older, conducted Jan. 25-28, 2007. Gallup Poll panel members are recruited through random selection methods. The panel is weighted so that it is demographically representative of the U.S. adult population. For results based on these samples, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±6 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
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(((({ping))))))
Which is the most ruthless SOB?
I take that one!
Ugh. None of the above, please!
I second none of the above.
I like the basis of your decision - and I agree with it.
Give me a hard, butt kicking, prick, - I pick that one.
LOL! That is an interesting way of putting it!
Mark my words: neither one will be elected President. So better to find somebody else to represent the party, or forget about winning in '08.
You need a backup seconder, just holler.
Agreed!
Done. If Rudy McRomney gets the nod I am going third party. I will support any of the others to one degree or another but not these three.
Your words are marked, noted and recorded because you are absolutely correct!
I know that this will bring the wrath of many anti-McCain Freepers, but McCain would be my candidate of choice if he were not so damned old. BTW, how old is Guliani?
Lol. Good question. Absent a major, major upset---and we have seen those on both sides of the aisle in the last 50 years---Republicans are going to have to choose between these two. I know why McLame gets such support on Iraq, but honestly, I don't trust him a bit more than Rudy to handle Iraq/terrorism, and while his supposed "stand" on moral issues is better, I don't trust McLame there either.
If it's Rudy vs. Hillary or Muhammed, it's a no-brainer, period.
>>>>>Ugh. None of the above, please
Then you elect HILLARY by default. DUMB move.
Guiliani is 62, McCain is 70.
McKeating's strengths include ethics? Now I KNOW these folks are full of it.
That's because the liberal press has chosen them for us.
Vote for a liberal - you'll get liberalism.
Don't vote (D/L). Don't vote (R/L). Don't vote for a letter of the alphabet.
Vote for a philosophy.
Vote for a Conservative - you'll get Conservatism.
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