| | November 21, 2008, Gallup Poll puts Palin first, admittedly close, 5 points over Romney, 6 above Huckabee.
This tally from Public Policy Polling April 15, 2010, also supports the "dead heat" contention ... including President Obama's own place with about 44% of the vote against any of the three. Note however that the numbers are not firm because the sample is small. You need 1054 to be 95% confident with +/- 3% error.
PPP surveyed 622 registered voters from April 9 th to 11th. The margin of error is +/-
3.9%. Other factors, such as refusal to be interviewed and weighting, may introduce additional error that is more difficult to quantify.
This CNN poll found that as of April 10, President Obama could win against Sarah Palin. Therefore, looking behind the numbers reveals what may be hidden strengths as November 2012 nears.
The poll found that 61 percent of Americans think Palin is not a typical politician, and half see her as honest and trustworthy. But 54 percent say they don't agree with her on the issues, 56 percent say she is not a strong and decisive leader, and 69 percent say she is not qualified to be president. Palin is popular in the South and in rural areas, but her unfavorable rating is at or near 60 percent among women, suburbanites, Independents, and in the Northeast and West.
The poll was conducted April 9-11, with 1,008 adult Americans, including 907 registered voters, questioned by telephone. The survey's overall sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points and plus or minus 4.5 percentage points for the sample of 498 Republicans and Republican leaning Independents.
Again, not a full tally of points, fewer than 500 Republicans of all stripes, but close...
So, yes, Jeff, Sarah Palin seems to be the clearn frontrunner only with me because whatever else, she has more presence of personality -- and that counts for more than issues or headlines or stances and it counts for more in the only poll that matters, the one on the first Tuesday in November. ... a long ways off...
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