http://www.gallup.com/poll/releases/pr040113.aspPOLL ANALYSES
January 13, 2004
Nationally: Two-Candidate Race for Democratic Nomination?
President Bush leads major Democratic candidates by 12 to 15 points
by David W. Moore
GALLUP NEWS SERVICE
PRINCETON, NJ -- In less than a week, the voters in Iowa will have indicated their preferences for the Democratic Party's nominee for president, setting the stage for a substantial realignment in the rank order of candidates among Democratic voters nationally.
Polls in Iowa show that former Vermont Governor Gov. Howard Dean and Missouri Congressman Rep. Richard Gephardt are in a competitive race for first, while Massachusetts Senator Sen. John Kerry and North Carolina Senator Sen. John Edwards are hoping to produce a strong showing.
Nationally, the picture looks quite different. A new CNN/USA Today/Gallup survey finds that the contest for the Democratic nomination right now is becoming more of a two-man race between Dean and retired General Wesley Clark -- who declined to run in the Iowa cCaucuses, citing his late entry into the presidential contest.
The poll shows Dean receiving 26% of the vote among registered Democrats nationally, closely followed by Dean Clark with 20%. No other candidate reaches double-digits.
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General Election
At this point in the race, it does not appear that any of none of the major Democratic candidates does does better in a hypothetical match-up with Bush than any of the others. Bush leads each of four Democrats by essentially the same 12- to 15- percentage- point margin.
<b>While some political observers, as well as Democratic candidates, have suggested that Dean is less electable than other Democrats, the poll provides no corroborating evidence. At this point of the campaign, each of the major candidates appears about as strong as the other.one candidate appears about the same as the other.
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So much for the "electability" myth that Clark stacks up so much better than Dean. Well within the margin of error.