October 10, 2007
POLL: Gallup Democratic Primary
New results from the recent Gallup national survey of 1,010 adults (conducted 10/4 through 10/7) finds:
- Among 488 Democrats and those who lean Democratic, Sen. Hillary Clinton leads Sen. Barack Obama (47% to 26%) in a national primary; former Sen. John Edwards trails at 11% -- "each candidate's support is the same or varies by only 1 percentage point compared with a Sept. 14-16, 2007, poll." All other candidates receive less than five percent each.
- Favorable - Unfavorable Ratings
Democrats and Democratic Leaners (n=488)
Clinton: 81% - 14%
Obama: 70% - 17%
Edwards: 69% - 14%
All Adults (n=1,010)
Obama: 54% - 27%
Clinton: 51% - 44%
Edwards: 48% - 31%
- "Notably, the current poll finds Clinton with a favorable rating above 50% among all Americans for the first time since May."
By Eric Dienstfrey on October 10, 2007 3:37 PM | Permalink
Comments
For downloadabale questionnaires you might want to check out the Survey Questionniare Archive at: http://www.cadsr.udel.edu/sqa
The Survey Questionnaire Archive is an open collection of survey questionnaires used in social sciences and public policy making.
The archive is created, hosted and maintained by the Center for Applied Demography & Survey Research at the University of Delaware.
This digital collection allows users to browse, search, store and share survey instruments over the web.
The goal of the archive is to collect, capture, disseminate and preserve a wide variety of survey instruments.
Obama: 54% - 27%
Clinton: 51% - 44%
How can people look at favorability numbers like that with a straight face and say that Clinton would be the stronger general election candidate?
Posted on October 10, 2007 6:06 PM