Georgia Political
Survey:
Perdue Ratings Sky-High ... Chambliss
At Critical Point ... Voters Unsure About Re-Electing Their Own
Lawmakers
(4/29/08) An InsiderAdvantage / Majority Opinion survey conducted
April 27 of 472 registered voters shows Gov. Sonny Perdue the big
gun in Georgia politics. Perdue’s approval rating of 63% is
“the highest it has been in years” in the InsiderAdvantage
surveys of state politics, according to CEO Matt Towery. “Whatever
damage anyone thinks he sustained in the legislative session is
purely imaginary,” said Towery. (The poll was weighted for
age, race, gender, and political affiliation. The margin of error
was slightly under 5%.)
U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss, who qualified to run for reelection
this week, did not enjoy such high numbers. Chambliss had a job
approval rating of 51%. “That’s actually not too bad,”
said Towery. “We now have come to realize that if a candidate
is anywhere above 45%, then he or she can win reelection. That said,
it means he will have to work hard. Senators are generally less
known by the public because, after their paid media from their last
campaign wears off, their name identification drops off. And right
now, incumbent Senators just are not very popular, anyway.”
Towery went on to note: “I don’t think these are alarming
numbers for a well-funded Chambliss. But if things go the wrong
way for the GOP in the presidential race and that flows down, then
we could see a more competitive Senate race. My guess is that once
Saxby starts running paid ads, his numbers will increase.
As for the members of the General Assembly, voters for the first
time indicated indifference to the reelection of their own state
representative or senator. Only 31% said they would vote for the
reelection of their state representative, while 22% said they would
vote against and the rest were undecided. The news was worse for
state senators: 27% said they would vote to reelect their senator
if opposed, but 25% said they would vote against, with the rest
undecided.
“Those of us who have or do serve in the General assembly
really never realize how few voters know who we are,” said
former Rep. Towery. “In this case I think we see a combination
of low name identification, combined with some voter hostility.
What it means is that some races may be closer than expected and
we might see more people deciding to qualify to run as the week
goes by,” he added.
Note: InsiderAdvantage polls nationally and has polled the
correct winner in 13 out of 14 presidential contests this year.
In a few weeks, Creators Syndicate, the nation’s largest syndication
company, which currently syndicates Matt Towery’s national
column, will begin also syndicating InsiderAdvantage’s national
polls related to the presidential contest and issues of major issue
to the country.
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