Bradley in DC
Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2007
- Messages
- 12,279
http://www.brcpolls.com/08/RMP 2008-I-01.pdf
ROMNEY NEEDS BIG GET-OUT-THE-VOTE EFFORT TO CATCH McCAIN
On the Republican side, the early low profile campaign strategy of Rudy Giuliani has cost him
dearly in Arizona as GOP voters look elsewhere for leadership and find it mostly in John McCain and Mitt
Romney. By not competing in the early primaries, it appears that Giuliani has relegated himself to the
political non-entity level in Arizona after briefly leading in the polls last fall. Today, Giuliani attracts only
seven percent and barely three percent are strongly committed to his election. The marginal performance of
Giuliani may come to stand as a classic example of how not to run a presidential campaign in a western state
like Arizona where the phrase “From New York City?” may cut deeper than preferences for taco sauce.
McCain holds a commanding 40 percent compared to 23 percent for Romney, nine percent for
Huckabee and just seven percent for Thompson. Thompson withdrew from the race earlier this week but his
name will remain on the ballot. Some think that Thompson supporters will shift to McCain, but they very
well might find Romney or Huckabee of great appeal. If these voters do gravitate toward McCain, it is
basically a wrap for McCain in Arizona but if not, the GOP race could also become significantly more
competitive. Among most likely to vote Republican, McCain’s lead over Romney shrinks from 17 to 13
points.
While the Republican presidential primary appears more settled than the Democratic race, it too
could also experience some shifts by election day. This traces to the fact that a four of ten GOP voters who
“lean” toward one candidate or the other admit they could change their mind on who they favor between now
and election day. Another ten percent were without any favorite at the time of this survey .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Republican Presidential Primary – Arizona (Includes early voters)
All Republicans Most likely to vote
Firm
Might
Change Total Firm
Might
Change Total
McCain 25% 15% 40% 23% 16% 39%
Romney 11 12 23 12 14 26
Huckabee 5 4 9 5 4 9
Guiliani 3 4 7 3 3 6
Thompson2 3 4 7 2 7 9
Hunter 1 * 1 1 0 1
Keyes * 0 * 0 * *
Paul 1 2 3 2 2 4
No preference yet 10 6
* Less than 1⁄2 of 1 percent
2
Thompson withdrew from Campaign this week but his name will still be on the ballot.
ROMNEY NEEDS BIG GET-OUT-THE-VOTE EFFORT TO CATCH McCAIN
On the Republican side, the early low profile campaign strategy of Rudy Giuliani has cost him
dearly in Arizona as GOP voters look elsewhere for leadership and find it mostly in John McCain and Mitt
Romney. By not competing in the early primaries, it appears that Giuliani has relegated himself to the
political non-entity level in Arizona after briefly leading in the polls last fall. Today, Giuliani attracts only
seven percent and barely three percent are strongly committed to his election. The marginal performance of
Giuliani may come to stand as a classic example of how not to run a presidential campaign in a western state
like Arizona where the phrase “From New York City?” may cut deeper than preferences for taco sauce.
McCain holds a commanding 40 percent compared to 23 percent for Romney, nine percent for
Huckabee and just seven percent for Thompson. Thompson withdrew from the race earlier this week but his
name will remain on the ballot. Some think that Thompson supporters will shift to McCain, but they very
well might find Romney or Huckabee of great appeal. If these voters do gravitate toward McCain, it is
basically a wrap for McCain in Arizona but if not, the GOP race could also become significantly more
competitive. Among most likely to vote Republican, McCain’s lead over Romney shrinks from 17 to 13
points.
While the Republican presidential primary appears more settled than the Democratic race, it too
could also experience some shifts by election day. This traces to the fact that a four of ten GOP voters who
“lean” toward one candidate or the other admit they could change their mind on who they favor between now
and election day. Another ten percent were without any favorite at the time of this survey .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Republican Presidential Primary – Arizona (Includes early voters)
All Republicans Most likely to vote
Firm
Might
Change Total Firm
Might
Change Total
McCain 25% 15% 40% 23% 16% 39%
Romney 11 12 23 12 14 26
Huckabee 5 4 9 5 4 9
Guiliani 3 4 7 3 3 6
Thompson2 3 4 7 2 7 9
Hunter 1 * 1 1 0 1
Keyes * 0 * 0 * *
Paul 1 2 3 2 2 4
No preference yet 10 6
* Less than 1⁄2 of 1 percent
2
Thompson withdrew from Campaign this week but his name will still be on the ballot.