Hillary ‘Super delegate’ win would be unfair, voters say
March 18, 2008
By Susan Page -
A majority of Democratic voters say it would be unfair for Hillary Rodham Clinton to win the presidential nomination through the support of "super delegates" if she lags among the convention delegates elected in primaries and caucuses, according to a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll.
If that happens, one in five say they wouldn't vote for the New York senator in the general election.
Gallup: Obama Leads Clinton 50% to 44%
March 15, 2008
Barack Obama leads Hillary Clinton in national Democratic nomination preferences by a statistically significant 6-percentage point margin, 50% to 44%, according to Gallup Poll Daily tracking interviews from March 11-13.
Bill Clinton Gives More Voters Doubts About Electing His Wife
March 14, 2008
Bill Clinton plainly has had an impact on his wife’s campaign — just not the one the couple intended.
A plurality of 44% of registered voters say the fact that Hillary Clinton is married to the former president gives them reservations or makes them “very uncomfortable” about electing her, according to the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll. That is up by double digits from 33% who expressed reservations or discomfiture in a Journal/NBC poll last November, just as the 2008 nominating races were about to get underway.
Hillary Clinton’s negative rating rivals Santorum’s
March 13, 2008
New York Sen. Hillary Clinton has something in common with former Republican Sen. Rick Santorum. A large percentage of Pennsylvania voters dislike both of them.
In fact, greater percentages of voters here have consistently viewed Mrs. Clinton unfavorably than Mr. Santorum, according to a review of data from a respected statewide poll.
EXIT POLL: ‘Change’ Tops ‘Experience”…Again
March 4, 2008
By Gary Langer
The theme of change continues to resonate in Ohio and Texas, but not by as wide a margin as in most previous primaries. The ability to "bring needed change" beats "experience" as the most important quality in a candidate by about a 20-point margin in Ohio and by about 15 points in Texas, according to preliminary exit poll results.
