45% Identify Romney as Straw Poll Winner
Forty-five percent (45%) of Likely Voters were able to identify Mitt Romney as the winner of the recent straw poll in Ames, Iowa.
Forty-five percent (45%) of Likely Voters were able to identify Mitt Romney as the winner of the recent straw poll in Ames, Iowa.
Former Senator John Edwards (D) and former Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) are now two points apart in the presidential race, with Edwards leading 46% to 44%.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has a ten-point lead over New York Senator Hillary Clinton in race for Colorado’s nine Electoral Votes. It’s Giuliani 50%, Clinton 40%.
If Senator Hillary Clinton is the Democratic Presidential candidate in 2008, the race for Ohio’s 20 Electoral College votes might be just as close as it was in 2004.
Early in the 2008 cycle, New York Senator Hillary Clinton has a modest edge over two Republican hopefuls and a larger lead over two others in New Hampshire.
Senator Hillary Clinton leads all Republican hopefuls in the race for Florida’s 27 Electoral College votes. The Sunshine State cast its votes for the Republicans in each of George W. Bush’s election victories.
This week’s numbers show the Clinton tide receding just a bit and Obama recovering some lost ground.
In the coming weeks, we’ll see whether a straw poll with light turnout in Ames, Iowa really matters in the race for the Republican Presidential nomination.
Not much has changed in the Barack Obama-Fred Thompson match-up since two weeks ago.
New York Senator Hillary Clinton’s recent remarks on lobbyists have drawn fire from other challengers seeking the Democratic Presidential nomination.
A new national telephone survey shows former Mayor Rudy Giuliani now leading New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson 47% to 39%.
While America’s voters are not particularly happy with the current Republican President, the leading Democratic Presidential Candidates have no advantage over the top GOP Hopefuls on key issues.
Entering the month of August, it is quite easy to come up with an explanation for why each of the leading Republican Presidential candidates will not win their Party’s nomination.
New York Senator Hillary Clinton has been steadily gaining support since April in her quest for the Democratic Presidential nomination.
Arizona Senator John McCain (R) has had little but bad news over the past month.
Hillary Clinton is pulling away from the field in the race for the Democratic Presidential nomination but remains weaker than other major Democratic contenders in match-ups with top Republicans.
Former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson and Arizona Senator John McCain are each seen as politically conservative by 43% of American voters.
Fifty-three percent (53%) of American voters believe that New York Senator Hillary Clinton is politically liberal.
The first Rasmussen Reports telephone survey gauging the general election appeal of Dennis Kucinich finds him trailing the top GOP candidates for the presidency.
On the surface, the race for the Republican nomination appears to have stabilized in recent weeks.