The election for president is little more than a year away, and if the election were held today, the most recent CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll suggests President George W. Bush would be re-elected in a close race. That poll shows 53% of registered voters saying Bush deserves re-election. However, as many registered voters currently say they will definitely not vote for Bush (38%) as say they will definitely vote for him (38%). On the Democratic side, retired Gen. Wesley Clark continues to lead the field for that party's nomination in a rather tightly contested race. Gallup data from the past month show that the Rev. Al Sharpton continues to be the top choice among black Democrats. Generally speaking, more Americans say they are pleased with the field of candidates running for president in 2004 than say they wish others would join the race.
<...>
The poll also asked Democrats (including independents who lean to the Democratic Party) about their preferences for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 2004. The results are consistent with what Gallup has been finding for the past month, with Clark holding a slim lead over the eight other candidates. With 18% support among Democrats registered to vote, Clark leads a second tier of candidates, which includes Howard Dean (13%), Joe Lieberman (13%), John Kerry (11%), and Dick Gephardt (10%). A third tier of candidates includes Al Sharpton (6%), John Edwards (6%), Carol Moseley Braun (5%), and Dennis Kucinich (3%).
Clark has led the Democratic field in Gallup Polls ever since he formally announced his candidacy in mid-September. Dean's support began to increase in the early summer months and he has been in double digits since July. Dean's and Clark's ascensions have come at the expense of Lieberman, Kerry, and Gephardt. This latter group of candidates have all served in Congress and are nationally recognized political figures. Their earlier standing could thus be attributed to their greater name recognition rather than any particular appeal of their campaigns. Support for these three had been in at least the mid-to-high teens (Lieberman's support often exceeded 20%) in the earlier part of this year, but now their support levels have settled into the 10% to 13% range.
One key Democratic constituency -- blacks -- shows very different preferences for the nomination. A combined sample of black Democrats from the last three Gallup Polls show Sharpton as the leading candidate among blacks. Twenty-two percent of blacks say they support Sharpton for the nomination, giving him a nine-point edge over Clark and 10 points over Lieberman. No other candidate gets double-digit support among black Democrats, and about one in five do not express a preference.
<...>
http://www.gallup.com/poll/releases/pr031022.aspDTH