9/22, "Bloomberg endorses Cuomo. Wait, Why?," NY Observer, by D. Freedlander
- Michael Savage notes on his radio show today, 'Mosque Mike' endorsed Cuomo.
"A poll released today finds long-shot tea party Republican Carl Paladino is closing in on front-running Democrat Andrew Cuomo in the race for New York governor.
- The Quinnipiac University polls showed Cuomo with a 49 percent to 43 percent lead among likely New York voters. Seven percent were undecided.
"The question was whether Carl Paladino would get a bounce from his big Republican primary victory. The answer is yes," said Quinnipiac polling director Maurice Carroll. "He's within shouting distance and -- you can count on it -- he will be shouting."
The poll found the straight-talking Buffalo developer, the upset winner in last week's GOP primary, had
- 54 percent of the support of women voters to Cuomo's 34 percent. Men supported Cuomo, the one-term attorney general, 49 percent to 46 percent.
Paladino has sought to ride a wave of voter anger at Albany's high taxes, high spending and string of corruption cases in state government, all of which is controlled by Democrats....
- Quinnipiac finds that the largest share of those polled -- 41 percent -- said the most important quality in a candidate is the
- ability to bring change.
Just two in 10 felt a candidate needs to share their values and about the same felt honesty was a top quality.
- Paladino is a tea party-supported Republican who shocked the GOP a week ago in winning the primary over the party's designee, former U.S. Rep. Rick Lazio.
Carroll said Paladino's support is boosted by conservative voters and those who are motivated to vote in November.
In previous polls of registered voters, rather than today's poll of likely voters, Cuomo has held a better than 2-to-1 edge. Cuomo also has more than $20 million in his campaign account as of the latest filings last summer, although Paladino -- a millionaire -- is now starting to raise cash in addition to the more than $10 million of his own money he has pledged to spend.
The poll questioned 751 likely voters from last Thursday 16 to Monday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points."
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