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Politics

Newt Leads Mitt, But Not by Much

Emily Ekins | 12.20.2011 5:51 PM

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A new Reason-Rupe Poll of 1,200 adults on cell phones and landlines finds former House Speaker Newt Gingrich to be the most favored candidate among Republican and Republican-leaning voters to win the GOP presidential nomination at 27 percent. However, his lead is narrow, with Mitt Romney coming in at 25 percent. Next is Ron Paul at 7 percent, while 22 percent say they are still undecided.

If you were voting today in the 2012 Republican primary for president, which one of the following candidates would you favor?  (asked of Republicans and Republican Leaners)

 

When these voters are split between Republican-leaners and Republicans, the results flip. Among Republican-leaners, Mitt Romney leads the pack with 28 percent, followed by Newt Gingrich at 19 percent, and Ron Paul at 10 percent. Among Republicans, Gingrich leads at 30 percent, followed by Romney at 24 percent, and Ron Paul at 6 percent. Among pure independents, defined as those who do not lean toward either party, Ron Paul leads with 19 percent, while Gingrich and Romney are tied at 9 percent.

If you were voting today in the 2012 Republican primary for president, which one of the following candidates would you favor? (asked of Republicans, Republican Leaners, and Independents)

The poll also asked all Americans who would be their last choice to become president out of the the aforementioned list of Republican presidential candidates. Michele Bachmann won with 17 percent followed by Newt Gingrich at 12 percent.

Of this list of Republican presidential candidates, who would be your last choice to become president? (Asked of all respondents)

 

 

Find full Reason-Rupe Q4 2011 poll results, question wording, and methodology here. 

The Reason-Rupe Q4 2011 poll collected a nationally representative sample of 1200 respondents, aged 18 and older from all 50 states and the District of Columbia using live telephone interviews from December 1-13. Interviews were conducted on both landline and mobile phones. The margin of sampling error for this poll is +/- 3 percent. Questions on the GOP presidential primary were collected from December 3rd-13th, have a sample size of 1029, and a ± 5 percent margin of error.

Follow Emily Ekins on Twitter @emilyekins  

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NEXT: Federal Judge in Texas Lets Beer Be Beer

Emily Ekins is a research fellow and director of polling at the Cato Institute.

PoliticsRon PaulMitt RomneyNewt GingrichElection 2012Jon HuntsmanRick SantorumMichele BachmannRepublican Presidential NominationRick Perry
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  1. Colin   13 years ago

    The Paulnuts are gonna be screaming that you didn't put Paul in front.

    First, you report on the newsletters, and now this.

    You are truly dead in their eyes.

    1. iamse7en   13 years ago

      FYI, Guiliani was ahead in national polls this time 4 years ago. And Huckster in 2nd. So no, we couldn't care less.

      1. Auric Demonocles   13 years ago

        National polls are stupid.

    2. CE   13 years ago

      ABC News has Ron Paul at 15 percent nationally. Gallup has Ron Paul at 12 percent.

  2. Auric Demonocles   13 years ago

    Alt-text motherfucker, do you speak it?

    1. sage   13 years ago

      Is there a way to see alt texts with Android phones?

  3. PaulR   13 years ago

    Yup. Conservative 'Merica is really going to get behind Ron Paul. *sigh*

    1. SIV   13 years ago

      Many of them are.

      1. PaulR   13 years ago

        I hope I am wrong, but I just don't see it. I was disillusioned in 2008 when I witnessed just how lunatic the average conservative is when it comes to our foreign policy. Their love of national offense is as deep as their love for Jebus.

        Plus, after watching rabid (anti-McCain) Ron Paul supporters become rabid McCain supporters because they "had to stop Obama" I realized how brainless most of them were when it came to rational thinking and decision making. No different from the average liberal.

  4. Rick   13 years ago

    I voted with my feet and left the United States, tossing my Citizenship in Jan.

  5. Father Jack   13 years ago

    Mitt fecking Romney? Newt fecking Gingrich? Drink! Arse! Girls!

  6. LarryA   13 years ago

    The poll also asked all Americans who would be their last choice to become president out of the aforementioned list of Republican presidential candidates. Michele Bachmann won with 17 percent followed by Newt Gingrich at 12 percent.

    Uh.

    "Won?"

    Geez.

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