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Regis Philbin
Aug 13th, 2006, 10:24 PM
http://rasmussenreports.com/2006/State%20Polls/August%202006/ConnecticutSenate.htm

Connecticut Senate: Two Days After Primary, Lieberman Ahead by 5


Lieberman 46%, Lamont 41%

August 12, 2006

Senator Joe Lieberman’s decision to run as an Independent sets up a lively campaign season for Connecticut voters. In the first General Election poll since Ned Lamont defeated Lieberman in Tuesday’s primary, the incumbent is hanging on to a five percentage point lead. Lieberman earns support from 46% of Connecticut voters while Lamont is the choice of 41%.

A month ago, the candidates were tied at 40% each.

Republican Alan Schlesinger earns just 6% of the vote, down from 13% a month ago.

57% of the state's voters view Lieberman as politically moderate while 51% see Lamont as liberal.

Half (52%) of Lamont voters believe Bush should be impeached and removed from office. Just 15% of Lieberman voters share that view.

Overall, 55% of Connecticut voters trust Lieberman more than Lamont when it comes to the War on Terror. Thirty-one percent (31%) trust Lamont.

Thirty-one percent (31%) have a Very Favorable opinion of Lieberman, 18% Very Unfavorable.

For Lamont, the numbers are 19% Very Favorable, 23% Very Unfavorable.

Lieberman still attracts 35% of votes from Democrats. Lamont will have to find a way to trim that number without alienating unaffiliated voters. Lieberman is viewed at least somewhat favorably by 65% of unaffiliated voters compared to 49% for Lamont.

Richard Tafoya
Aug 13th, 2006, 11:10 PM
Schlesinger is mired in a gambling scandal. (*cough* Republican Culture Of Corruption *cough*) GOP leaders are asking him to step down before Oct 1st so they can field a more electable candidate.

If that happens, much of Lieberman's general election support will shift as CT Republicans rally around a viable party candidate.

pinky
Aug 14th, 2006, 08:31 AM
Why should he be permitted to step down? DeLay (interesting that I initially typed that as "Lay"........is it really getting that hard to differentiate the GOP from the convicts? :greyno: ) has to run in Texas.

Yes, I know that New Jersey allowed Torricelli to step down and allow another Democrat (Frank Lautenberg) to run a few years ago. So we have a mixed history on this issue.

Regis Philbin
Aug 16th, 2006, 01:22 AM
Joe will get a huge sympathy vote from Republicans and so-called "swing voters"...what few Republicans there are in CT, that is...