|
Candidate
Feb 7-8 %
MA Senator John Kerry 47
NC Senator John Edwards 24
Retired General Wesley K. Clark 11
Former VT Governor Howard Dean 10
Civil Rights Activist Rev. Al Sharpton 3
OH Congressman Dennis Kucinich 2
Undecided * May not add up to 100%, due to rounding *In today’s release, Leaners among the Undecideds have been factored in. Without Leaners, the percentage of Undecideds is 13%.
Pollster John Zogby: "This year's frontloaded primary schedule appears to have worked well in favor of the front-runner -- as it apparently was intended to. It has become very much a sequential process as the winner in Iowa got a big bounce into New Hampshire, and the challengers had only a week to regroup. The same happened in succeeding weeks. While Edwards spent his time well in South Carolina and Clark did the same in Oklahoma, the fact is that the truncated schedule has worked well for the man who kept on winning. There has not been enough time for the challengers to raise enough money, spend time on the ground, or build upon free publicity because they could not cover enough states in a short time span. With all of this said, Kerry keeps on rolling.
"Kerry's victories are not based on any one or two sub-groups. His support is wide and deep. He has shown that he can hold all strands of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents together. This is particularly stunning when we consider that exactly one month ago (January 9), my Iowa polling had him at barely 15 points, well behind both Dean and Gephardt.
"Again and again, the principal factor is Kerry's rise and coalition is his electability. In both states, he leads the other candidates in strength of support and in the perception that He can defeat the President. Tennessee was a Red State in 2000. In a match-up against President Bush among Democrats alone, Kerry leads by an 84% to 7% margin.
"Note to pundits and historians: in 2004, Iowa and New Hampshire mattered. ”
http://www.zogby.com/news/ReadNews.dbm?ID=805
|