List of GAO Finalists Goes to White House
Updated: 6:47 p.m.
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Updated: 6:47 p.m.
OnMessage’s March 9-11 survey found President Barack Obama’s job rating at 49 percent approve/47 percent disapprove, while the Hart/McInturff survey (March 11, 13-14) found it at 48 percent approve
Updated: 5:47 p.m.
All these are even higher than his overall job approval, which stands at a still-respectable 47 percent.
However, 47 percent were undecided. The survey of 420 likely Democratic primary voters had a 4.8-point margin of error. The winner of the primary will face Sen.
Among likely voters, the poll found Boxer leading Campbell, 47 percent to 43 percent, with 10 percent undecided. The poll, conducted March 8-10, had a margin of error of 4 points.
A poll conducted for the Web site Daily Kos found Specter the leader with 47 percent to Toomey’s 41 percent, and a Quinnipiac University poll found Specter ahead 49 percent to 42 percent.
Two years later, he increased his showing to more than 64 percent at the same time that Obama was drawing only 47 percent in the district.
Bush won it in 2004 (53 percent to 47 percent) and more narrowly in 2000 (48 percent to 47 percent). Republicans have a registration advantage over Democrats, but not by much.
Scott Brown (R) won the seat that Ted Kennedy held for almost 47 years.
Currently, tea is available from 2:30 to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays for $37 per person, or $47 with Champagne. The Mayflower (1127 Connecticut Ave.
Ohio went for Democrat Barack Obama 52 percent to 47 percent last time, and its governor, Ted Strickland, is a Democrat. But each party has one of the state’s U.S. Senate seats, and the U.S.
Today, shale gas and other unconventional natural gas sources such as tight sands and coal bed methane provide more than 47 percent of the natural gas consumed in the U.S. annually.
The poll was taken in the hours before Tuesday’s primary, on Monday and Tuesday, and the results showed Kirk led Giannoulias 47 percent to 35 percent.
The poll was taken in the hours before Tuesday’s primary, on Monday and Tuesday, and the results showed Kirk led Giannoulias 47 percent to 35 percent.
On the Democratic side, Seals eked out a win of 48 percent to 47 percent over state Rep. Julie Hamos — a margin of victory that amounted to about 658 votes.
The district no longer leans Republican — Bush won 47 percent in 2004 and McCain only 43 percent in 2008 — and Democrats have a top-tier candidate of their own in state Rep. Bryan Lentz.
Poersch, 47, is a far cry from the smooth-talking political operatives that often walk the hallways of the Senate.
Rubio took 47 percent to Crist’s 44 percent, according to a survey of 673 Republicans taken Jan. 20-24. That 3-point lead fell just inside the survey’s 3.8-point margin of error.
Kirk led his chief primary competition, real estate developer Patrick Hughes, 47 percent to 8 percent, with 35 percent undecided.