WASHINGTON — Newt Gingrich is the strongest Republican candidate when matched head to head against Democratic President Obama, according to a McClatchy-Marist Poll released Tuesday. The former Speaker of the House of Representatives is back just 2 percentage points to the incumbent president among ...
Related News:-
Weasel Zippers » Blog Archive » Shock Poll: Palin Trails ...
Shock Poll: Palin Trails Obama By Only 5 Points, Beating Him Among Independent Voters — Update: Same Poll Finds 72% Of GOP-Leaning Voters Do Not Want Her To Run…
CNN Poll: Who wins an Obama vs. Palin matchup?
Washington (CNN) - She may be the best known Republican politician considering a bid for the White House, but Sarah Palin comes in third in a hypothetical horserace ...
Rick Perry Polls Best On Electability, But Do Voters Really Care?
WASHINGTON -- Two new national polls show that Republicans give Texas Gov. Rick Perry the best chance of beating President Barack Obama in 2012, even better than ...
Poll shows NJ voters disapprove of Obama - The Hill's Blog ...
A new poll showing New Jersey voters disapprove President Obama job performance provides more troubling news for the White House. The poll also bolsters prospects for New ...
Poll Analysis: PPP North Carolina vs. Obama | Race 4 2012
PPP has released their latest vs. Obama poll for North Carolina. Here are the results: (vs.
Print Page - MCCAIN VERSUS OBAMA: CAST YOUR VOTE!
NIGERIA BEST FORUM . NBF GENERAL CATEGORY => WORLD EVENTS => Topic started by: beibee on September 19, 2008, 07:56:01 AM
The Fix - Obama's erosion among white voters continues ...
The latest Washington Post/ABC News poll shows President Barack Obama's standing among white voters continuing to slip, a potentially ominous sign for his party with the ...
NC-2012 President: 47% Obama (D), 42% Gingrich (R) (PPP 3/17-20)
Public Policy Polling (D)3/17-20/11; 584 likely voters, 4.1% margin of errorMode: Automated phonePPP release National
The BRAD BLOG : NH Primary: Pre-Election Polls Wildly Different ...
NH Primary: Pre-Election Polls Wildly Different Than Results Announced for Clinton/Obama
No comments:
Post a Comment