Most Republicans feel betrayed by their party -- and show their
displeasure by supporting outsiders over establishment candidates in the
GOP presidential race.
Real-estate mogul Donald Trump and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson
are the favorites in the Republican race in the latest Fox News national
poll on the 2016 election. Neither has held elected office before and
yet the two of them -- together with businesswoman Carly Fiorina --
capture the support of more than half of GOP primary voters.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE POLL RESULTS
On the Democratic side, support for Vice President Joe Biden -- who
is still considering a run -- has almost doubled since August. But make
no mistake: Hillary Clinton remains the frontrunner.
Trump stays on top with 26 percent among GOP primary voters, followed
by Carson at 18 percent. Fiorina and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio are
next, tied at 9 percent. All four have gained ground. After the August
Fox News debate, Trump had 25 percent, while Carson had 12 percent,
Fiorina 5 percent and Rubio 4 percent.
Trump holds his leader status even though he was once again rated in
the poll as having done the worst job in the debate. Fiorina, Rubio and
Carson receive positive marks for their performances.
The appeal of outsiders comes from significant dissatisfaction with
the party establishment: 62 percent of Republican primary voters feel
“betrayed” by politicians in their party, and another 66 percent say the
recent Republican majorities in Washington have failed to do all they
could to block or reverse President Obama’s agenda. For comparison, 40
percent of Democratic primary voters feel betrayed by their party.
Frustration with party leaders has been a recurring theme for one
sitting GOP senator in the race, Ted Cruz of Texas, who is next in the
poll at eight percent. He was at 10 percent in August.
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush garners seven percent, a new low for him
in the Fox News poll. He had 15 percent support as recently as early
August.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is up a couple ticks to five percent
and Ohio Gov. John Kasich gets four percent. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee receives three percent and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul two
percent. All other candidates receive one percent or less.
The favorites among white evangelical Christians voting in the
Republican primary are Trump (29 percent), Carson (21 percent) and Cruz
(12 percent).
The top picks among self-described “very” conservatives voting in the
GOP primary are Carson (23 percent), Trump (22 percent), Cruz (13
percent) and Rubio (11 percent).
Straight talk is part of Trump’s outsider appeal -- but does he go
too far? Not for GOP primary voters: 65 percent of them say Trump just
tells it like it is, compared to 30 percent who think he is “too mean
and blunt” to be president. Trump’s style may be a liability in the
general election, though. Overall, 49 percent of voters find him too
mean and blunt, while 44 percent say we need his directness.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry dropped
out of the race in the last two weeks. In announcing his decision,
Walker made clear his desire to oust Trump. He called on other
Republicans to also get out so “voters can focus on a limited number of
candidates who can offer a positive, conservative alternative to the
current front-runner.”
But what would happen if the “current front-runner” aka Trump were
out? The Fox poll asks voters their second choice candidate, which
allows us to look at what happens to the race if someone were to get
out. For instance, if Trump gets out, Carson takes the top spot (24
percent), followed by Rubio (12 percent), Fiorina (11 percent), Cruz (11
percent) and Bush (10 percent).
Trump supporters go for Carson (23 percent), Bush (14 percent), Cruz
(12 percent) and Rubio (10 percent) as their second-choice picks.
Among all GOP primary voters, the second choice favorites are:
Fiorina (14 percent), Carson (13 percent), Trump (12 percent), Bush (10
percent) and Rubio (10 percent).
Clinton sits atop the Democratic pack with the support of 44 percent
of primary voters. Yet that’s a new low for her -- down five points
since last month. She was at 61 percent in June. Clinton is holding on
to her advantage despite 58 percent of all voters -- and 31 percent of
Democratic primary voters -- believing she is lying about her emails.
Clinton’s closest rival is still Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who
holds steady at 30 percent. Biden gets a record high 18 percent. A
month ago he was at 10 percent.
The remaining Democratic candidates are at two percent or less,
including the newest entrant -- Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig -- who
made it official September 9.
Without Biden in the race, it’s Clinton 56 percent and Sanders 32 percent.
Clinton also maintains her advantage over GOP front-runner Trump in a
potential 2016 matchup: 46-42 percent. Last month, it was Clinton
over Trump by 47-42 percent.
Who do voters think will be the next president? When asked to name
who will win next November, without the aid of a list, a plurality says
Clinton (28 percent) followed by Trump (20 percent). But the electorate
isn’t always great at predicting the outcome (at least not this far
out). Eight years ago, by almost four-to-one, voters said Clinton would
be the next president (44 percent), followed by former New York City
Mayor Rudy Giuliani (12 percent). Barack Obama came in third at six
percent (October 2007). The new poll finds Sanders third at five
percent, with Biden and the remaining GOP candidates splitting the rest
of the respondents.
This is fun: when all the names are tallied by party, about the same
number of voters says the name of a Democrat they think will be the next
president (37 percent) as says the name of a Republican (36 percent).
How many debates should there be?
Some of Clinton’s lesser-known competitors, as well as some
high-profile Democrats like House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, think
there should be more Democratic Presidential debates than the six
currently scheduled. Yet Democratic primary voters seem fine with that
number: 58 percent say that’s “about right,” while another 25 percent
think it’s “too many.” Just 14 percent say six is “too few.” Sanders
supporters (20 percent) are more likely than Clinton supporters (13
percent) to want more debates.
Republicans plan to hold at least nine debates and 50 percent of GOP
primary voters thinks that’s “about right.” Another 41 percent say
that’s “too many” and 7 percent say “too few.”
The poll also asks voters who did the best and who did the worst in
the September GOP debates hosted by CNN in California. Debate watchers
give the highest net performance score (best job minus worst job) to
Fiorina (+34 points), followed by Rubio (+7), Kasich (+2) and Carson
(+1). These are the only candidates to receive net positive scores for
their debate performance -- and they are the same four who garnered the
highest scores after the first GOP debate last month.
The lowest scores among debate watchers go to Trump (-13 points),
Paul (-7 points) and Bush (-4 points). Trump also got the lowest net
score after the first debate (-13 points).
Fiorina received a score of +12 points in August, even though she was
in the early debate for second-tier candidates. She participated in
the top tier debate this month and improved her net score by 22 points.
Pollpourri
In this year of the outsider, the poll asks voters what would make
them more worried about the state of American democracy: a November
match-up between another Clinton and another Bush or a race between
upstarts Sanders and Trump?
By a 53-39 percent margin, voters say Sanders vs. Trump would be a worse sign for our democracy.
The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with
1,013 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted
under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw
& Company Research (R) from September 20-22, 2015. The poll has a
margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points for
all registered voters, and 5 points for Democratic and 4.5 points
Republican primary voters.