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10:01 AM, Feb 24, 2012 • By MICHAEL WARRENThe newest poll of Michigan primary voters from Rasmussen Reports shows Mitt Romney regaining the lead in his home state just days before Michigan's presidential primary. Romney leads his closest rival, Rick Santorum, 40 percent to 34 percent, in a survey taken Thursday evening, one day after CNN's presidential debate in Arizona.
Read more... 1:13 PM, Feb 15, 2012 • By MICHAEL WARRENThe latest national survey from Rasmussen shows Rick Santorum with a 12-point lead over Mitt Romney among Republican primary voters. Thirty-nine percent of those polled support Santorum while 27 percent support Romney. Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul earned 15 percent and 10 percent, respectively.
Read more... 2:30 PM, Feb 9, 2012 • By WILLIAM KRISTOLYesterday I pointed out that "February 7 could prove to have been Super Tuesday if it turns out to be a key inflection point in the campaign." Two indications, I wrote, of such an inflection point would be "if Santorum now passes Newt Gingrich in national Republican surveys" and if he "continues to do better than Gingrich (and than Romney?) in poll match-ups against President Obama."
Read more... Romney not far behind president in key swing state.12:00 PM, Feb 9, 2012 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new Rasmussen poll of likely voters in Ohio shows Rick Santorum tied with Barack Obama in a hypothetical November match-up at 44 percent. In the Midwestern swing state, which will be critical for a Republican presidential victory in the fall, Mitt Romney falls 4 points behind Obama in that potential race, 45 percent to 41 percent. Here's more from Rasmussen:
Read more... 3:15 PM, Jan 31, 2012 • By JEFFREY H. ANDERSONMitt Romney seems to have succeeded in raising enough doubts about Newt Gingrich to secure a comfortable win in Florida, but his attacks and his prospective victory coincide with a majority of Americans thinking President Obama doesn’t look too bad.
Read more... 2:49 PM, Jan 13, 2012 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new 60-second radio advertisement from the Mitt Romney campaign makes an appeal to South Carolina's socially conservative Republicans. Listen to the ad below:
Read more... Newt continues his decline against the president.3:22 PM, Dec 14, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new poll from Rasmussen Reports shows Newt Gingrich declining further in a hypothetical matchup against President Barack Obama. Among the 1,000 likely voters surveyed on December 12 and 13, 49 percent say they would vote for Obama while 39 percent would vote for Gingrich.
Read more... 1:35 PM, Dec 1, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new national poll of likely Republican primary voters from Rasmussen Reports shows Newt Gingrich with a 21-point lead over Mitt Romney. According to Rasmussen, this is the largest lead held by any GOP candidate this cycle.
Read more... 1:39 PM, Nov 30, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENThe latest Rasmussen national poll has Newt Gingrich up over Barack Obama in a hypothetical general election match-up, 45 percent to 43 percent. That difference in within the 3-point margin of error, in a survey of 1,000 likely voters, but it shows a significant swing in support for Gingrich among voters. According to a Rasmussen poll released last week, Gingrich had been trailing Obama by six points.
Read more... 4:10 PM, Nov 3, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new national poll of 1,000 likely GOP primary voters from Rasmussen gives Herman Cain a slight lead at 26 percent, with Romney close behind at 23 percent and Gingrich in third at 14 percent.
Read more... 1:15 PM, Nov 2, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENA new poll from Rasmussen shows Herman Cain with a 10-point lead over Mitt Romney among 770 likely South Carolina Republican primary voters. Thirty-three percent of respondents prefer Cain, as opposed to 23 percent for Romney. Newt Gingrich polled third at 15 percent.
Read more... 5:00 PM, Sep 23, 2011 • By MICHAEL WARRENRasmussen's latest survey of likely voters in New Hampshire shows Mitt Romney with a 21-point lead over Rick Perry. The poll, which was taken before last night's debate in Orlando, showed Romney with 39 percent of the vote among Republican primary voters in the Granite State, with Perry having 18 percent of the vote and Ron Paul with 13 percent.
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