Two Last Mississippi Polls
That’s a swing of 8 points in Clinton’s favor since March 5-6, but obviously not enough. This is one state where Obama leads among women, 55 percent to 38 percent.
Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.
That’s a swing of 8 points in Clinton’s favor since March 5-6, but obviously not enough. This is one state where Obama leads among women, 55 percent to 38 percent.
bare 50 percent to 45 percent margin that superdelegates should vote for the candidate that has the most delegates after the primaries and caucuses are over, according to a Gallup poll conducted March 6-
Democrats are agreed that Florida and Michigan should be represented at this summer’s convention, but they differ on how to accomplish that, according to a Gallup poll conducted March 6-9.
Both candidates have their respective party primaries for the full term on May 6. The winners of those contests will compete in the November general election.
Bill Foster (D), Oberweis and House party committees spent more than $6 million ahead of last Saturday’s special election upset, in which Foster bested Oberweis, 53 percent to 47 percent.
Democrats already hold a 23-6 edge in the New York Congressional delegation, and that advantage could grow in November.
The two candidates will face each other in the Tar Heel State’s May 6 Republican primary.
Both Gallup and a Newsweek poll conducted March 5-6 had the two within a point of each other on Saturday.
That represents an 8 point pickup for Clinton compared to ARG’s March 5-6 poll.
– **Economy:** Clinton leads McCain by 6 points, while McCain leads Obama by the same margin.
Most supporters of Hillary Clinton would like to see a “dream ticket” of her and Barack Obama, while the majority of Obama supporters opposed the idea, according to a Gallup poll conducted March 6-9.
Even if Carson wins today, his hold on the seat could be tenuous, because three well-known Democrats are waiting in the wings to take on Carson for a full term in the May 6 primary.
Medicare alone is expected to account for nearly 4 percent of GDP by 2018, a shocking amount when you consider that ALL discretionary federal spending today makes up about 6 percent of GDP.
The poll was conducted March 5 and generally squares with an American Research Group poll conducted Mar. 6-7 that we reported the other day.
story Hillary Clinton’s victories this week in Texas, Ohio and Rhode Island have vaulted her back into a statistical dead-heat with Barack Obama in a national poll conducted by Newsweek March 5-6.
Barack Obama leads Hillary Clinton 58 percent to 34 percent in next week’s primary in Mississippi, according to an American Research Group poll conducted March 5-6. It has a 4 point margin of error.
**Florida:** Clinton leads Obama 55 perrcent to 39 percent in a poll conducted March 6. The margin of error is 4 percent.
Ward 6 Councilmember Tommy Wells (D) plans to begin meeting with community and business groups soon to discuss the site.
The state filing deadline is June 6, followed by the primary on Aug. 19. — Shira Toeplitz
– Obama and Clinton ran within about 6 points or less of each other on three top issues: the economy, Iraq and health care.