Hillary moving up in polls, barely loses to mccain in latest poll

alonzomourning23

CAGiversary!
Feedback
26 (100%)
Ran across this nbc news/wall street journal poll:



"Thinking some more about the 2008 election for president: If the next election for president were held today, and [see below] was the Republican candidate and [see below] was the Democratic candidate, for whom would you vote?"


11/4/05-11/7/05

McCain 44%
Hillary 42%
depends 1%
other/neither 6%
unsure 7%


"If the 2008 Democratic presidential primary were held today, whom would you support if the candidates are

Hillary 41%
Edwards 14%
Gore 12%
Kerry 10%


"Are there any candidates on this list for whom you would definitely NOT vote for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination?"

Gore 17%
Kerry 14%
Hillary 13%


"Let me mention some people who might seek the Republican nomination for president in 2008. If the next Republican primary for president were being held today, for which one of the following candidates would you vote:


Giuliani 34%
McCain 31%
Gingrich 8%



"Are there any candidates on this list for whom you would definitely NOT vote for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination?"

Gingrich 21%
McCain 19%
Guiliani 8%
Frist 5%




http://www.pollingreport.com/2008.htm


Also, mccain easily beat kerry, hillary easily beat frist and kerry easily beat frist.

This seems to dispute conventional wisdom that Hillary lacks support. She's been gaining and is approaching McCain numbers.

It's funny, McCain gets more strong opposition from republicans than Hillary does from democrats. I wonder why 19% of republicans so strongly oppose him though. Also makes me wonder why a criminal (frist) gets less opposition than McCain and 2 other guys.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']
It's funny, McCain gets more strong opposition from republicans than Hillary does from democrats. I wonder why 19% of republicans so strongly oppose him though. Also makes me wonder why a criminal (frist) gets less opposition than McCain and 2 other guys. [/QUOTE]

Because he's a slightly less idiotic and much less annoying version of Howard Dean?
 
[quote name='zionoverfire']So is Gore.:lol:[/QUOTE]


I'm actually surprised Gore isn't higher. I think I'm just the most shocked that Edwards, at least in this pole, is considered to be the second consideration behind Clinton. I mean the guy has served 1 senate term, that's pretty much it for his political experience and now he's looked at as #2 for president? That's just odd if you ask me.

At any rate, its far too early to be making judgements on the next election because we've still got 3 more years to wait. On top of that, it will be at least 2 years before there's any sort of formal announcement of who is or is not running.
 
[quote name='RedvsBlue']
At any rate, its far too early to be making judgements on the next election because we've still got 3 more years to wait. On top of that, it will be at least 2 years before there's any sort of formal announcement of who is or is not running.[/QUOTE]

Which is why this shit is so funny.:lol:

I guess you can see who thinks it's new though.
 
[quote name='RedvsBlue']I'm actually surprised Gore isn't higher. I think I'm just the most shocked that Edwards, at least in this pole, is considered to be the second consideration behind Clinton. I mean the guy has served 1 senate term, that's pretty much it for his political experience and now he's looked at as #2 for president? That's just odd if you ask me.

At any rate, its far too early to be making judgements on the next election because we've still got 3 more years to wait. On top of that, it will be at least 2 years before there's any sort of formal announcement of who is or is not running.[/QUOTE]

I'm aware of that, my point is the animosity towards hillary is not nearly as high as many claim it to be.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']I'm aware of that, my point is the animosity towards hillary is not nearly as high as many claim it to be.[/QUOTE]

I think you've been watching a bit too much Fox News.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']I'm aware of that, my point is the animosity towards hillary is not nearly as high as many claim it to be.[/QUOTE]

Give her time...
 
[quote name='zionoverfire']I think you've been watching a bit too much Fox News.[/QUOTE]

Well lately that's true, but I've heard the sentiment repeated elsewhere many times, including here.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']Well lately that's true, but I've heard the sentiment repeated elsewhere many times, including here.[/QUOTE]

By other people who watch to much Fox News?:D

Honestly how many democrats do you think most people can name who are eligible to be president (Bill Clintons is out) and who haven't lost a recent election?
 
Oh boy. This has to be the absolutely most pointless poll going.

Remember when Howard Dean was the annointed Democratic nominee before one Iowa caucus vote was cast? Yeah, keep that in mind.

Nothing in 2005 can or will accurately measure primaries 3 years from now let alone a general election 3 years f rom now. Howard Dean held the polling lead the day before the "I have a scream." speech and after that he tanked like the Atlanta Braves do every October.
 
You didn't do a very good job addressing the point of the OP's poll, PAD. This poll clearly shows that there *IS* support for Hillary Clinton in the United States.

The way you talk sometimes, I imagine that if you were pressed to come up with a list of people Hillary would be able to beat, you'd come up with the usual characters: Jaques Chirac, Osama bin Laden, and maybe OJ Simpson. What this poll shows is that, contrary to what Rush is telling you, is that the people of New York do not view her as a carpetbagger (she WAS elected, after all), and that almost half of Americans would vote for her if she was running against McCain. This runs contrary to your belief (and I know you feel this way) that Hillary is the single most beatable Democrat not named Kerry poised for 2008.

Edwards might have a shot in 12 years, but he needs to go back to being a senator and proposing many of the plans (particularly involving labor) he and Kerry put together. As it stands, his minimal senate experience leave him with little more than the "failure" label from 2004.

One thing the poll cannot replicate, since it is not an election year, is the powerful effect of the Republican propoganda machine. Who will be the swift vets of 2008, and how believable will their message be? That they had an effect on Kerry is undeniable, no matter how full of shit they were. Who will repeat the "party hitmen" role in 3 years?

One issue I have with this poll is that Guiliani had more support among those asked than McCain did; granted, it was marginal (3%), but I've seen a percentage that small indicate a "mandate" (see last November). With that in mind, I can't figure out why in the hell they would use McCain versus Hillary, and not Giuliani versus Hillary. That would be more telling, and more (possibly) accurate.

PAD, I don't know if you haven't had your coffee, but the PAD I know wouldn't be bitching about the poll coming early. That's an easy copout, and a very poor one (in terms of arguments) at that. The PAD I know would be gloating that the Democrats are still losing to the Republicans (of course, then you'd be ignoring that McCain is a radical departure from the Republicans we've had in the administration for the past 5 years).

That 15% undecided/none of these choices in the first poll cited does indicate that the true results to an election such as this can go way in one direction or another.
 
[quote name='PittsburghAfterDark']Oh boy. This has to be the absolutely most pointless poll going.

Remember when Howard Dean was the annointed Democratic nominee before one Iowa caucus vote was cast? Yeah, keep that in mind.

Nothing in 2005 can or will accurately measure primaries 3 years from now let alone a general election 3 years f rom now. Howard Dean held the polling lead the day before the "I have a scream." speech and after that he tanked like the Atlanta Braves do every October.[/QUOTE]

3 more seasons of Geena Davis = Hillary ftw, just watch
 
Does anyone think McCain could make it through the GOP primaries? Bush & Rove did a good job smearing him in 2000 and marginalizing him ever since. I like McCain even though I don't agree all of his positions. I wish he would've run for VP with Kerry last year. That would have been a very interesting ticket.

Does anyone know if Chelsea with be 35 by the time her mom leaves the White House? :lol:
 
[quote name='MrBadExample']Does anyone think McCain could make it through the GOP primaries? Bush & Rove did a good job smearing him in 2000 and marginalizing him ever since. I like McCain even though I don't agree all of his positions. I wish he would've run for VP with Kerry last year. That would have been a very interesting ticket.

Does anyone know if Chelsea with be 35 by the time her mom leaves the White House? :lol:[/QUOTE]

lol, that would be great - instead of the rumored "Bush dynasty" with Jeb and George P. running, we instead see "Clinton dynasty".

My respect for McCain is still gone after he didn't stand up for Kerry when they swiftboated his military service.
 
[quote name='E-Z-B']My respect for McCain is still gone after he didn't stand up for Kerry when they swiftboated his military service.[/QUOTE]
Yes, that was very disappointing from McCain.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']You didn't do a very good job addressing the point of the OP's poll, PAD. This poll clearly shows that there *IS* support for Hillary Clinton in the United States.

The way you talk sometimes, I imagine that if you were pressed to come up with a list of people Hillary would be able to beat, you'd come up with the usual characters: Jaques Chirac, Osama bin Laden, and maybe OJ Simpson. What this poll shows is that, contrary to what Rush is telling you, is that the people of New York do not view her as a carpetbagger (she WAS elected, after all), and that almost half of Americans would vote for her if she was running against McCain. This runs contrary to your belief (and I know you feel this way) that Hillary is the single most beatable Democrat not named Kerry poised for 2008.

Edwards might have a shot in 12 years, but he needs to go back to being a senator and proposing many of the plans (particularly involving labor) he and Kerry put together. As it stands, his minimal senate experience leave him with little more than the "failure" label from 2004.

One thing the poll cannot replicate, since it is not an election year, is the powerful effect of the Republican propoganda machine. Who will be the swift vets of 2008, and how believable will their message be? That they had an effect on Kerry is undeniable, no matter how full of shit they were. Who will repeat the "party hitmen" role in 3 years?

One issue I have with this poll is that Guiliani had more support among those asked than McCain did; granted, it was marginal (3%), but I've seen a percentage that small indicate a "mandate" (see last November). With that in mind, I can't figure out why in the hell they would use McCain versus Hillary, and not Giuliani versus Hillary. That would be more telling, and more (possibly) accurate.

PAD, I don't know if you haven't had your coffee, but the PAD I know wouldn't be bitching about the poll coming early. That's an easy copout, and a very poor one (in terms of arguments) at that. The PAD I know would be gloating that the Democrats are still losing to the Republicans (of course, then you'd be ignoring that McCain is a radical departure from the Republicans we've had in the administration for the past 5 years).

That 15% undecided/none of these choices in the first poll cited does indicate that the true results to an election such as this can go way in one direction or another.[/QUOTE]

Your missing PAD's (which is similar to the point I was making) point in the matter, though. He's saying that despite what polls say the Iowa caucaus is what really determines who's going to be the popular candidate not popularity polls (which is what this one certainly seems like).

There was plenty of polls before the Iowa caucaus that said Howard Dean was the most popular democratic candidate. What happened? He lost the Iowa and fumbled from there on. Its way too early to say that Hillary is popular enough to run for president (or that a more popular candidate will come along, which is what I'm hoping for). You guys think Jack Thompson is bad? Imagine him as a female version in the white house.
 
Offtopic, but I wish the states would get their primaries more in synch with each other. It seems silly that Iowa and New Hampshire have such a huge influence on future primary elections in other states.
 
Why is it not typical of me? I never change my stance on polls. They don't mean anything this early out.

I can't tell you who the Republican candidate may be I couldn't tell you who the Democratic candidate may be. 3 years out it's completely pointless. In 2001 it looked like career suicide to run against Bush 2 months after 9/11. No one had ever heard of Howard Dean outside the hardest of the hardcore political junkies. Look at the reality that changed by 2004.

If polls determined winners, like I said, Kerry, Edwards and the rest of the Seven Dwarfs would have quit and given the nomination to Howard Dean last spring. I fail to see how that's intellectually dishonest.

Hillary running, despite "Commander and Chief" isn't about America's willingness or lack therof to elect a woman. Hell, there's people in California that actually believe either Geena Davis or Martin Sheen is the actual President. There's also a number of Republican's that may or may not run. I'm not convinced Guiliani wants the job. I'm not sure Condoleeza Rice wouldn't run. I'm not sure any of the Republicans on that poll would fare well in primaries against a true Reagan conservative like George Allen.

There's too many variables for this poll to mean anything.
 
There is meaning in such that the results show that people would support Hillary in a hypothetical case today, which runs counter to the arguments people make (including PAD, I'm certain) that she's unelectable.

No poll is meaningless (unless it involves questions about beans and George Wendt).
 
[quote name='E-Z-B']Offtopic, but I wish the states would get their primaries more in synch with each other. It seems silly that Iowa and New Hampshire have such a huge influence on future primary elections in other states.[/QUOTE]
I agree. Why can't they rotate which states get the first primaries? All the current system does is shaft the states that come last.
 
I think the state primary dates are governed only by their state laws. I think Pennsylvania was talking about moving up their primary date closer to Iowa's, but haven't heard anything again since the '04 primaries.
 
I think you all are missing the big problem Hillary has, and that's negative attitudes toward her. Here's a very interesting part of the poll:

"Do you want [see below] to run for president in 2008 or not?" N=827 registered voters, MoE ± 3.5

Hillary Clinton
10/12-13 & 17/05
Yes - 48
No - 49
Unsure - 3

4/18-21/05
Yes - 49
No - 48
Unsure - 3

2/14-16/05
Yes - 46
No - 49
Unsure - 5

12/04
Yes - 38
No - 50
Unsure - 12

Although PAD is right that it's waaaay too early to draw too many conclusions from these numbers, it's interesting that half the electorate sees Hillary's candidacy in a negative light. That's been the biggest concern with her possibly running, that there aren't enough voters out there that aren't already convinced that she is the wrong choice. Democrats should be worried about making the same mistake as in 2004, where Kerry was overwhelmingly their choice but didn't appeal enough to moderates to win.

As for the Republicans, I'm surprised how strongly Rice polls with Bush's numbers in the crapper. If somehow things turn around for the current administration, she could be a very competitive candidate.
 
Condoleeza would never win. Number 1, democrats wouldn't vote for her, and number 2, republicans would never vote for someone (a) who's black and (b) who's a woman.
 
[quote name='E-Z-B']Condoleeza would never win. Number 1, democrats wouldn't vote for her, and number 2, republicans would never vote for someone (a) who's black and (b) who's a woman.[/QUOTE]

Yeah, Republicans never vote for blacks (JC Watts? Michael Steele?) or women (Kay Bailey Hutchison, Elizabeth Dole, Susan Collins, Olympia Snowe, Deborah Pryce?). :roll:
 
bread's done
Back
Top