Monday, June 27, 2011

Highest GOP polling since 2009 was week before Nov. 2010 elections proving again that Tea Party is right and establishment GOP is wrong

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More proof if needed that the establishment GOP which gave us Obama could easily beat him if they wanted to or if they listened to the voters. But they don't want to beat Obama and they despise voters.

6/27/11, "Generic Congressional Ballot," Rasmussen Polls

"Republicans hold a seven-point lead over Democrats on the Generic Congressional Ballot for the

  • week ending Sunday, June 26.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 44% of Likely U.S. Voters would vote for their district’s Republican congressional candidate, while 37% would choose the Democrat instead. This is almost

The GOP has been consistently ahead on the Generic Ballot since June 2009, leading by as much as 12 points and as little as two. The week before Election Day last November, support for Republicans peaked at 51%, the highest level of support either party has enjoyed in the last two years,

  • but GOP support tapered off after that.

This marks the 14th week in a row that Republican support has fallen in the narrow range of 41% to 44%....

Republicans post a 38% to 24% lead among voters not affiliated with either of the major parties, but another 38% of that group remains either undecided or leans towards a third-party candidate....

It is worth noting that during 2006 and 2008, Democrats led on the Generic Congressional Ballot and also were trusted more than Republicans on the health care issue. Following passage of the president's health care proposal, the Republicans became the more trusted party on health care and also took the lead on the Generic Ballot. In January of this year, Republicans held a 14-point advantage on the health care issue,

  • but that has disappeared.

Still, for four weeks in a row, a generic Republican candidate has led President Obama in a hypothetical 2012 election matchup.

Voters are more willing than ever to elect a woman president, and most think there’s a good chance a woman will win the White House in the next 10 years.

Most voters still want to repeal the national health care law, and confidence that the law will improve the quality of health care

  • has fallen to a new low."...



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