Startling Republican Numbers

AR182

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i have always found this guy interesting to listen to or read...i think fred thompson gets the nomination.

By Michael Barone

Jun 5, 2007


(US News) There are some startling numbers on Scott Rasmussen's weekly national poll on the Republican race for president. Rudy Giuliani continues to be in first place, but with 23 percent of the vote, the lowest percentage he's gotten all year. Roughly tied for second place are Fred Thompson (17), Mitt Romney (15), and John McCain (14). I wouldn't put too much stock in the fact that Thompson is second and McCain fourth; the numbers are a statistical tie. More interesting is the trend over the course of the year. For the following table I've averaged Rasmussen's results for each month (with the numbers reported May 1 counted as April numbers, since that's when the interviewing took place).

These numbers confirm my intuitive sense of the flow of the race. Giuliani surged in February and March, then fell back as Thompson's name appeared on the list. The lead he has now is anything but commanding. Thompson, who raised his first money yesterday, clearly is competitive. Romney has been on an upswing, but of limited scope. McCain has been falling, but not precipitously; he had a slight uptick in May, not statistically significant but coinciding with his spirited defense of the surge in Iraq.

My sense is that the numbers in the Republican race are considerably more fluid than those on the Democratic side; the national poll numbers seem to indicate this. Republicans this cycle, like Democrats in 2003-04, clearly have the sense that their party is in grave danger of losing and are seeking a candidate who they think can win. That has helped Giuliani. But the poll numbers in Iowa and New Hampshire, where Romney has averaged a slight lead, and South Carolina, where McCain has had a slight lead, indicate that Giuliani may have a rough path to the nomination. As for the contest in Florida> on January 29, Giuliani starts off with a lead that looks a lot like his lead in national polls, which is not surprising considering that Florida is too large for effective retail campaigning and no one was concentrating on it much until it shifted to the January 29 date.

Stephen Hayes, who's been covering the nascent Thompson campaign closely, reports that Thompson is going to target Florida. Will Giuliani's lead hold up there?



By Michael Barone
Copyright ? 2006 U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.
 

Chadman

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From what I'm hearing, a lot of the Bush political insiders are taking up the Thompson cause, which makes some sense. Probably one of the only candidates that will strongly pull the religious right, which is huge for them.
 

AR182

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From what I'm hearing, a lot of the Bush political insiders are taking up the Thompson cause, which makes some sense. Probably one of the only candidates that will strongly pull the religious right, which is huge for them.

chad i think this guy has positioned himself the best of any candidate in either party....besides getting tremendous exposure from law & order, he is somebody who is considered an outsider because of his time away from d.c....

i think this guy wins the whole thing in 08...
 

djv

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I think he better step forward soon. Or your going to get more questions and pot shots from the other Reb candidates. Like ask him who knows what he thinks. I heard that a few times in the debate. I don't see him winning. MC Cain will not either. MC Cain to tied to war and Bush.
If Tommy does not come forward soon. He becomes just a actor with a opinion.
 

BetterUp

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I don't think we are ready for a President named Tommy Thompson.

Years ago they pulled this farmer out of the north woods to be Governor of Wisconsin. To hear him speak was painful, hard to imagine he could even run a farm.

I think he served 3 terms as Gov. then got swept into the national scene. He must have done something right, for the right people. BTW, they have apparrently given him speech lessons in the last 20 years.

O/T..His brother was on the poker tourny circuit, years ago.
 

Chadman

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Have heard even more rumblings around these parts about MN Gov. Pawlenty being a prime Republican V.P. candidate for someone. He did a top notch job heading off several tax increase proposals (democratic, of course), vetoing them and gaining the votes to uphold them, and has done a good job with the budget, surplus, etc. Believe it or not, I voted for him in the last election, because he seems to interject some common sense in most cases, and is a positive guy all around. He's a good governor in a good state to live in now, and would be a good guy to throw up for examination for the party. I had heard McCain had already pretty much picked him out to be his guy, but I don't think he's gonna get the chance.

I'm not sure about Fred. No lights on him yet, we'll see how it goes when all attention is on him - including the current candidates. And I really don't think he will easily win anything.
 

djv

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I guessed everyone here would catch on since we were not talking about Tom from Wisconsin who is in the race. And Fred Tommy Thompson I believe is the actor. Acutely this whole group is actors. As are the dems.
 
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