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Ds and Rs nominees-latest Quinnipiac poll
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:03 pm
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:03 pm
July 8, 2014 - Clinton Owns Dem 2016 Nod; Tops Top Republicans, Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds; 2014 Generic House Race Tied, But Voters Hate Dems Less
LINK
Interesting. Still way too early for this to be anything but a snapshot in time.
LINK
Interesting. Still way too early for this to be anything but a snapshot in time.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:07 pm to wfeliciana
I don't know how you these stupid people could vote Democrat over a Republican after what we have seen out of Obama and the dems for the last six years is beyond me.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:08 pm to wfeliciana
Where do these frickers poll? Just the north and northeast? Those numbers are pure shite.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:13 pm to bhtigerfan
quote:
Where do these frickers poll? Just the north and northeast? Those numbers are pure shite.
They say it is from a national sample. This also shows a national perspective, but actually talks about states. LINK
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:22 pm to papasmurf1269
quote:
I don't know how you these stupid people could vote Democrat over a Republican after what we have seen out of Obama and the dems for the last six years is beyond me.
Not that I don't disagree with your premise, but I can see where a slight majority of the American People view the Republicans as doing absolutely nothing but bitching over the last 6 years. Although controversial and flawed, I think people, outside of the South, view the President as at least trying to find solutions and doing something, while the Repubs have done nothing except bitch about everything.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:33 pm to Smalls
Really?All I see Obama doing is forcing his progressive views on us and dividing the shite out of the American people.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:35 pm to papasmurf1269
quote:
Really?All I see Obama doing is forcing his progressive views on us and dividing the shite out of the American people.
But seems the majority may not agree with you. Plus don't think you can just blame him for dividing the American people.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:36 pm to wfeliciana
Secretary Clinton leads the Democratic primary with 58 percent, followed by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts with 11 percent, Vice President Joseph Biden with 9 percent and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo with 4 percent. No other candidate tops 1 percent and 15 percent are undecided.
The GOP primary shows U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky with 11 percent, New Jersey Gov. Christopher Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush with 10 percent each, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin with 8 percent each, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio with 6 percent, no other candidate over 3 percent, with 20 percent undecided.
"Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton takes a ton of heat on wealth, book sales and her legacy at the State Department, but she emerges with no serious Democratic challenger, while the Republican field remains clustered and flustered," said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.
In the 2016 presidential race, American voters back Hillary Clinton over leading Republican contenders:
47 - 38 percent over Christie;
49 - 40 percent over Paul;
49 - 40 percent over Huckabee;
48 - 41 percent over former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush;
48 - 41 percent over U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.
In these races, Clinton's lead among women ranges from 16 percentage points to 19 points. The margin among men in each race is too close to call.
By a slim 48 - 43 percent margin, American voters have a favorable opinion of Clinton, but that tops all other contenders who get negative or divided favorability scores or where more than 50 percent of voters don't know enough about them to form an opinion.
The GOP primary shows U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky with 11 percent, New Jersey Gov. Christopher Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush with 10 percent each, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin with 8 percent each, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio with 6 percent, no other candidate over 3 percent, with 20 percent undecided.
"Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton takes a ton of heat on wealth, book sales and her legacy at the State Department, but she emerges with no serious Democratic challenger, while the Republican field remains clustered and flustered," said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.
In the 2016 presidential race, American voters back Hillary Clinton over leading Republican contenders:
47 - 38 percent over Christie;
49 - 40 percent over Paul;
49 - 40 percent over Huckabee;
48 - 41 percent over former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush;
48 - 41 percent over U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.
In these races, Clinton's lead among women ranges from 16 percentage points to 19 points. The margin among men in each race is too close to call.
By a slim 48 - 43 percent margin, American voters have a favorable opinion of Clinton, but that tops all other contenders who get negative or divided favorability scores or where more than 50 percent of voters don't know enough about them to form an opinion.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:37 pm to wfeliciana
Maybe not,but imo if we get another dem such as Hillary,we are fricked more so than we are now.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:38 pm to papasmurf1269
quote:
Really?All I see Obama doing is forcing his progressive views on us and dividing the shite out of the American people.
Exactly, only ~42% of the country agrees with you.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:40 pm to papasmurf1269
Plus, in presidential elections, national polls are meaningless. You have to look at state polls.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:42 pm to Smalls
Well,I live in La and 99% sure a R will win.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:44 pm to papasmurf1269
quote:
Maybe not,but imo if we get another dem such as Hillary,we are fricked more so than we are now.
I understand. But I believe if we would have had Hillary instead of Obama we'd be much better off now. And three times better off if the Tea Party had not hijacked the Rs.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:50 pm to wfeliciana
I am not sure about anything in politics anymore except that the policies we have now are not working and need to change.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:52 pm to wfeliciana
How is Huckabee up there in the same tier as big names like Bush and Christie?
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:53 pm to papasmurf1269
quote:
I am not sure about anything in politics anymore except that the policies we have now are not working and need to change.
And for sure our economy is in bad shape. Personally I'm just tired of all the finger pointing. I'd really like to see something done, not just listen to each side blame the other.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:54 pm to wfeliciana
Dems made a mistake nominating Obama instead of Hillary in 2008, in my opinion. He has damaged the party in the long run, and Clinton would have been much more of a "leader".
One thing I CANNOT WAIT to see is who Obama endorses in 2016. If it is someone other than Clinton, get the popcorn out.
One thing I CANNOT WAIT to see is who Obama endorses in 2016. If it is someone other than Clinton, get the popcorn out.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:54 pm to RidiculousHype
quote:
How is Huckabee up there in the same tier as big names like Bush and Christie?
I was surprised to but doesn't he have a tv or radio show with a fair following?
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:56 pm to wfeliciana
I agree. But the house is the only thing remotely slowing Obama down with his bullshite policies and most of the time he just goes around them.
Posted on 7/12/14 at 8:58 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
quote:
Dems made a mistake nominating Obama instead of Hillary in 2008, in my opinion. He has damaged the party in the long run, and Clinton would have been much more of a "leader".
One thing I CANNOT WAIT to see is who Obama endorses in 2016. If it is someone other than Clinton, get the popcorn out.
I'll confess that what happened with that nominee race turned me off big time. I didn't even vote. Not that it would have mattered where I lived. I think he'll endorse her if she runs. And I think that is still an "if". A lot of his campaign folks are already working for one of the Hillary PACs.
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