Michigan: Clinton Leads GOP Hopefuls by 9-13 points
In Michigan, the latest Rasmussen Reports survey finds Hillary Clinton earning 49% or 50% of the vote against each of the top four Republican candidates.
In Michigan, the latest Rasmussen Reports survey finds Hillary Clinton earning 49% or 50% of the vote against each of the top four Republican candidates.
GOP frontrunner Rudy Giuliani increases his advantage over Joe Biden in the latest Rasmussen Reports national survey.
If New York Senator Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee in Election 2008, it may take some work to keep Oregon in the Democratic column--51% of the state’s voters currently have an unfavorable opinion of the Democratic frontrunner.
Republican contender Rudy Giuliani now leads Clinton up 47% to 40% in the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.
Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney continues to lead all Republicans in polling for the New Hampshire Presidential Primary.
The latest Rasmussen Reports survey of the New Hampshire Presidential Primary shows Hillary Clinton leading Barack Obama by fifteen percentage points.
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.
Karl Rove, the enormously influential advisor to President George W. Bush, is resigning from the White House staff effective August 31.
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.
Seventy-nine percent (79%) of American adults favor a proposal requiring employers to fire workers who falsify identity documents.
Forty-nine percent (49%) of American voters believe that the Federal Government Itself has become a special interest group.
Fifty-nine percent (59%) of voters believe that allowing the government to intercept phone calls from terrorist suspects makes America safer.
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.