In The News – Voter Sentiment About National Leaders
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Quinnipiac released it’s quarterly poll of voter sentiment about National leaders on November 27, 2006.
At the top of the poll is Rudy Guiliani with a mean score of 62.4 having a positive feeling about the ex-Mayor New York City. I guess he is still riding high from his handling of the New York City 911 disaster.
The bottom two – numbers 19 and 20 – are Senator Harry Reid from Nevada and Senator John Kerry for Massachusetts. Just going to show that negative comments about the military’s lack of education will not make you a very likeable person!
Here is the top twenty. The first number is the mean score (out of 100) that were given by the respondents. The higher the score the more positive. The second number is the percentage who did not know enough about the person to make a judgement one way or the other. Which goes to show that 1% of the population still does not know who our President is as well as our former President!
- Rudolph Giuliani – 64.2 (9)
- Sen. Barack Obama – 58.5 (41)
- Sen. John McCain – 57.7 (12)
- Condolezza Rice – 56.1 (7)
- Bill Clinton – 55.8 (1)
- Sen. Joseph Lieberman – 52.7 (16)
- NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg – 51.1 (44)
- John Edwards – 49.9 (20)
- Senator Hillary Clinton – 49 (1)
- NM Governor Bill Richardson – 47.7 (65)
- Sen. Joseph Biden – 47 (52)
- Nancy Pelosi – 46.9 (34)
- Gov. Mitt Romney – 45.9 (64)
- Former VP Al Gore – 44.9 (3)
- President George Bush – 43.8 (1)
- Sen. Evan Bayh – 43.3 (75)
- Newt Gingrich – 42 (15)
- Sen. Bill Frist – 41.5 (53)
- Sen. Harry Reid – 41.2 (61)
- Sen. John Kerry – 39.6 (5)
Technorati Tags: Quinnipiac, polls, voter sentiment
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