Democrats prefer
Clinton, but disapproval of her runs high statewide
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Tennessee’s Republican primary is down to a race
between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, with Trump holding an advantage but with many
party voters still undecided, the latest MTSU Poll shows.
On the
Democratic side, Hillary Clinton leads Bernie Sanders, but her statewide
disapproval ratings are the highest of any top candidate on either ticket.
“We asked two
types of questions about the presidential race to get a sense of where potential
voters stand,” said Dr. Jason Reineke, associate director of the poll at Middle
Tennessee State University.
“First, we asked
registered voters to name, off the tops of their heads, the one candidate they
would most like to see win the election and the one candidate they would least
like to see win the election. Second, we asked whether they would favor or
oppose each of several specific, current candidates running. We then broke the
results down for the self-described Democrats, independents, and Republicans
who responded to our poll.”
The poll of 600
registered Tennessee voters was conducted Jan. 15-20 and has a margin of error
of 4 percentage points. Voters in Tennessee and 10 other states will go to the
polls March 1 in the so-called “SEC primary.”
Trump leads among Republicans, independents
When asked to
name the one person they would most like to win the 2016 presidential election,
33 percent of self-described Republican voters named Trump. Cruz came in
second, chosen by a significantly smaller 17 percent of Republicans.
But 28 percent of
GOP voters said they did not know who they would like to see win.
Ben Carson, who led
the presidential field among Tennessee voters in the October 2015 MTSU Poll,
drew just 7 percent of Republican voters in the latest sample. The remaining
Republican candidates also registered in the single digits at best.
Trump also
posted the best numbers among self-described independent voters, with 26
percent naming Trump as the candidate they’d most like to see win. Democrat Sanders,
the next-most-popular candidate, came it at a significantly lower 10 percent.
But 30 percent
of independents were undecided, and the rest chose candidates who pulled in
only single-digit percentages.
The news wasn’t
all good for Trump, though. About a quarter of Tennessee voters – the biggest
chunk of them Democrats – singled him out as the candidate they’d least like to
see win the presidency, far more opposition than any other Republican candidate
attracted.
Clinton solid among Democrats but least-liked
candidate statewide
Statewide opposition
to Trump, though notable, was only half as strong as statewide opposition to
Clinton. Fifty percent of Tennessee voters – most of them Republicans – named
her as the candidate they’d least like to see win the presidency.
But 47 percent
of self-described Democratic voters in the sample picked Clinton as the
candidate they’d most like to see win the presidency. A significantly smaller
15 percent named Sanders, and 26 percent said they did not know. All other
percentages were in the single digits.
‘Favorability’ and the Republicans’ ‘deep bench’
Despite favoring
Trump, Tennessee Republican voters seemed open to backing either Cruz or Carson
as alternatives — 65 percent said they “strongly favor” or “favor” Trump’s
becoming president, but 60 percent said the same of Cruz, and 60 percent said
the same of Carson.
Dr. Ken Blake,
director of the MTSU Poll, said that even with the subsample’s larger error
margin taken into consideration, the findings suggest a majority of state
Republican voters would favor either Trump, Carson or Cruz.
“The Republicans
have what you might call a ‘deep bench’ of presidential candidates in
Tennessee,” Blake said. “If the current favorite, Trump, were to fade, it
appears majorities of GOP voters would be willing to back Cruz or Carson,
perhaps especially if Clinton turned out to be the Democratic nominee.”
Among Democratic
voters, only 42 percent would strongly favor, or favor, Sanders becoming
president, statistically much less than the 77 percent who would support
Clinton as president.
For previous
MTSU Poll results, go to www.mtsupoll.org.
Methodology
Telephone
interviews for the poll were completed by Issues & Answers Network Inc.
from among a random sample of registered Tennessee voters age 18 and over. Data
were collected using Tennessee statewide voter registration sample of 60 percent
landline and 40 percent cell phones. The average interview length was 12
minutes. Quotas by gender and Grand Region were implemented. Data were weighted
based on respondent age to ensure the data represent Tennessee registered
voters. The survey’s error margin of 4 percentage points indicates one can be
95 percent confident that the actual population figure lies within 4 percentage
points (in either direction) of the poll result. Error margins for subgroups
can be larger, depending on the subgroup’s size.
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