Not exact matches
According to those exit
surveys, 7 % of Michigan Republican
primary voters identified as Democrats.
Pollsters
surveyed 517 registered Hispanic
voters in the state, and 35 percent said they would vote for Romney in the
primary compared to 20 percent for Gingrich.
The
survey was sampled from 400 GOP
primary voters between Oct. 25 - 29, before and after last week's third GOP presidential debate.
As for the rest of the Democratic field in this
survey, seven percent (7 %) of
voters would choose Biden or New York Governor Andrew Cuomo if the 2016 Democratic presidential
primary were held in their state today.
A statewide telephone
survey of Likely
Voters finds Cuomo with 54 % support versus 38 % for Paladino, the winner of last Tuesday's state GOP
Primary.
This weekend, Public Policy Polling
surveyed 897 likely Republican
primary voters and 525 likely Democratic
primary voters in the Palmetto State.
A Public Policy Polling
survey released last Thursday reported that 16 % of New Hampshire Republican
primary voters view Pataki favorably while 45 % view him unfavorably.
The polls
surveyed 494 likely Republican
primary voters and 598 likely Democratic
primary voters from June 19 to 22 on land lines and cell phones.
Black Democratic
voters also favored de Blasio over all other candidates, including Thompson, the only black candidate in the
primary, whom only 25 percent of those
surveyed said they backed, according to the poll.
Pollsters have repeatedly included the former Central Brooklyn state senator alongside Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and Comptroller Scott Stringer when
surveying voters on potential
primary match - ups.
The poll was conducted over a three - day period between September 5 - 7, and
surveyed 500 likely Democrat
voters in the Albany Democratic
primary.
But the same
survey shows more than half of Republican
voters in the South Florida House district remain undecided with about one month to go before the special
primary to replace Rep. Jose Felix Diaz, who resigned his seat effective Sept. 26 to run in Senate District 40.
For example, in one 1997
survey of California
voters 37 percent of Republicans said that they planned to vote in the 1998 Democratic gubernatorial
primary, and 20 percent of Democrats said they planned to vote in the 1998 Republican United States Senate
primary.
The 1997
survey of California
voters revealed significantly different policy preferences between party members and
primary voters who «crossed over» from another party.
A Public Policy Polling
survey of Democratic
primary voters nationally who watched the debate found that it reinforced Hillary Clinton's front runner status.
The Grimm
survey questioned 446 likely GOP
primary voters who live in the 11th Congressional District.
The
survey was conducted from July 24 to 28 among 446 likely Democratic
primary voters over ladlines and on cell phones, with a margin of error plus or minus 4.6 percent.
The poll
surveyed 800 registered
voters — not likely
primary voters, it should be noted — and has a 4.1 percent margin of error.
The
survey focused on key
voters — «prime» Democrats who either registered since 2014, voted in one of the last two Democratic
primaries or in the last two general elections.
The
survey included 602 likely Democratic
primary voters and included no data on the Republican field.
State Treasurer Rob McCord was third in the
survey of 649 likely Democratic
primary voters with 12 %, followed by former Department of Environmental Protection Secretary and one - time PUC Commissioner John Hanger at 7 percent.
More significantly, the latest University of New Hampshire
survey found fewer than two in 10 likely Republican
primary voters had firmly decided whom to support.
A Quinnipiac University
survey showed Spitzer edging out Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, his main rival for the Democratic comptroller nomination, by a four point margin among likely Democratic
primary voters.
The latest poll
surveyed 602 likely Democratic
primary voters between Aug. 22 and Monday.
Quinnipiac University
surveyed 750 likely Democratic
primary voters by telephone from Aug. 28 to Sept. 1.
Quinnipiac University
surveyed 579 likely Democratic
primary voters by phone from Aug. 7 to 12.
But a CNN / WMUR
survey conducted by the University of New Hampshire also indicates that the race is far from settled, with nearly nine in ten potential Republican
primary voters saying they haven't come close to making up their minds and more than four in ten saying they're not satisfied with the field of GOP candidates running for president.
In pollster - ese, we would resume polling on Monday with a separate
survey of New York
voters on the question of the governor's political future, include questions about the Gillibrand - Ford Democratic Senate
primary (we didn't have a large enough sample of Democrats from the previous week), eliminate the now - outdated Paterson - Cuomo
primary matchup, and take the 646 completed interviews from the previous week as a done deal on the remaining approval ratings and general election toss - ups.
A Quinnipiac University
survey released Thursday showed Spitzer edging out Stringer by a four point margin among likely Democratic
primary voters.
He leads all candidates with 43 %, including 47 % of black
voters, according to the latest Quinnipiac
survey of likely New York City Democratic
primary voters.
The poll
surveyed 579 likely Democratic
primary voters by phone from Aug. 7 to 12.
Quinnipiac University
surveyed 446 likely Democratic
primary voters by phone from July 24 to 28.
According to a Quinnipiac University
survey released Thursday morning, 52 percent of likely New York City
voters support Bloomberg, an Independent, with 36 percent backing New York City Comptroller William Thompson, who recently won the Democratic
primary for mayor, and two percent supporting Conservative Party candidate Stephen Christopher.
A Behavior Research Center
survey released Thursday indicates that 64 percent of likely Arizona Republican
primary voters support McCain, with19 percent backing former Rep. J.D. Hayworth, five percent supporting Jim Deakin, a Tea Party activist, and 12 percent undecided.
A Quinnipiac University
survey released Wednesday morning indicates that 8 in ten
voters, including three - quarters of black
voters, say a Democratic
primary challenge by Cuomo, who is white, of Paterson, who is black, would not be racially divisive.
But the Resorts World - financed
survey found that two - thirds of Queens
primary voters favor turning their Aqueduct racino into a full - gambling operation — a prospect the owners would welcome, according to reports in the New York Post.
The poll, which polled a representative sample of 700 citywide likely Democratic
primary voters, including 300 in Queens, found that 51 percent of those
surveyed opposed building new full - gambling casino sites in New York City.