SC Republicans to Graham: Drop Out

Xenliad

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http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/main/2015/09/sc-republicans-to-graham-drop-out.html

PPP's newest South Carolina poll finds a clear message for Lindsey Graham from Republican voters in the state: drop out. 78% of GOP primary voters think Graham should end his Presidential bid, compared to only 15% who think he should continue on with it.

The campaign has generally hurt Graham's image in the state. When we polled South Carolina in February, 54% of Republican primary voters approved of the job he was doing as Senator to 29% who disapproved. Now his numbers are upside down with only 36% approving of him to 51% who disapprove. Graham was in a tie for 3rd place at 13% in February, now he's dropped down to a four way tie for 8th place at 3%. And perhaps most embarrassing given their long running feud South Carolina Republicans say that if they had to choose between Graham and Donald Trump, they would pick Trump by a 72/20 spread.

Of course Graham isn't the only person getting blown out by Trump. Trump leads the field in the state with 37% to 21% for Ben Carson with no one else even polling in double digits. Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz are at 6%, Carly Fiorina, John Kasich, and Marco Rubio are at 4%, Graham, Mike Huckabee, Rand Paul, and Scott Walker are at 3%, and Rick Santorum is at 2%. Posting negligible support are Chris Christie, Bobby Jindal, and Rick Perry each at 1%, and Jim Gilmore and George Pataki at less than 1%.

Trump is winning with every segment of the GOP electorate- he's at 47% with moderates, 40% with men, 39% with Evangelicals, 36% with seniors, 36% with younger voters, 34% with women, and 32% with 'very conservative' voters. He's also becoming more broadly acceptable to Republican voters. 64% have a favorable opinion of him to only 28% with an unfavorable one, the best favorability we've found for him in any state yet. And when matched head to head with Rubio (58/35), Fiorina (56/32), Walker (59/31), and Bush (66/27), Trump blows them all out of the water.

The one exception to that rule is Carson, who edges out Trump 46/45 head to head. Carson is by far and away the most well liked of the GOP candidates with 74% viewing him favorably to only 14% with a negative opinion. Carson is also the only person to hit double digits as voters' second choice, with 18% saying he'd be their back up pick.

Other notes:
-The South Carolina poll reinforces what we learned about Donald Trump's supporters nationally last week. 69% of his voters believe Barack Obama is a Muslim, and only 22% think he was born in the United States. Additionally 59% of Trump voters disapprove of Presidential candidates speaking Spanish to Hispanic audiences, compared to only 26% who think that's alright. Additionally 64% of Trump supporters are opposed to the renaming of Mount McKinley to just 21% who support it.

-Trump's supporters aren't that far off from the GOP mainstream on any of those issues though. 60% of primary voters think President Obama is a Muslim, 12% a Christian. 26% think President Obama was born in the United States, 50% think he was not. (40% think Ted Cruz was born in the United States.) 40% approve of Presidential candidates speaking Spanish to Hispanic audiences, 44% do not. And 58% oppose the renaming of Mount McKinley, only 21% support it.

-Jeb Bush's favorability rating with South Carolina Republicans has dropped a net 44 points since February, from +25 at 52/27 to -19 at 33/52. Bush is particularly struggling with 'very conservative' voters, posting a 26/64 favorability with them. But he's not doing well with moderates (40/43) or 'somewhat conservative' voters (39/44) either. Those favorability numbers are starting to resemble Chris Christie's. Only 3% of 'very conservative' voters support Bush for the nomination. Bush's support has declined from 19% to 6% in the state since the winter.

-Losing support at a similar rate is Scott Walker, who had 18% in February and is now down to just 3%. Only 21% of voters support Walker's proposed wall on the US border with Canada, to 60% who are opposed to it. Even among Walker's own supporters only 19% support the Canadian wall to 40% against it. If there's good news for Walker it's that he does at least still have a decent favorability rating at 46/26.

-Even though they're well back in the horse race Mike Huckabee (55/30), Carly Fiorina (54/22), Marco Rubio (53/29), and Ted Cruz (52/27) are all at least seen favorably by a majority of GOP voters. That could leave them in position to make a move if Trump and/or Carson ever come crashing back down to earth. Cruz is the only candidate besides Carson who was included in our February poll to grow his support since then, from 3% to 6%.

-Rand Paul with a 28/52 favorability rating continues his string of being under water in every place we've polled since the first Republican debate. Chris Christie at 28/55 has the worst numbers in the field though, and his support has dropped from 7% down to 1%.

On the Democratic side Hillary Clinton leads with 54% to 24% for Joe Biden, 9% for Bernie Sanders, 2% each for Martin O'Malley and Jim Webb, and 1% for Lincoln Chafee.

This is the worst performance we've found for Sanders anywhere in quite a long time, but it speaks to his continued difficulty with African American voters. He gets only 3% with them- well behind Clinton's 59% and Biden's 27%- and in a state where a majority of Democratic voters are black that makes it hard for him to do very well.

Biden's entry into the race would clearly hurt Clinton a lot more than it would hurt Sanders, at least in South Carolina. 49% of Biden supporters say Clinton would be their second choice, to just 12% who say it would be Sanders. Take Biden out of the mix and Clinton would have a 54 point advantage in the state at 66/12.

Biden, with a 74/11 favorability rating, is just as popular as Clinton who comes in at 74/15. But there are still substantially more Democrats who want Clinton as the nominee. She's at 64% with 'very liberal' voters, 59% with African Americans, 57% with men, 56% with seniors, 53% with 'somewhat liberal' voters, and 52% with women. The groups who she doesn't hit majority support with are whites (48%), moderates (46), and younger voters (41%).

Full results: http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2015/PPP_Release_SC_90915.pdf
 
Good, now maybe this will allow him to be beat next time when he runs for reelection.
 
Yeah, why the hell do they keep electing him as their Senator. Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeze .... if we work on anything as a group, it should be "TERM LIMITS" . Get rid of these senile, corrupt old bastards.
 
Yeah, why the hell do they keep electing him as their Senator. Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeze .... if we work on anything as a group, it should be "TERM LIMITS" . Get rid of these senile, corrupt old bastards.


It's my understanding that S.C. has open primaries. Thus Dems can cross over and vote for him.
 
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