Dave Weigel points
me to the first public poll (.pdf) in the Texas-14 Republican
congressional primary race. It shows incumbent Ron Paul beating
challenger Chris Peden 63 percent to 30 percent, with 7 percent
undecided. Paul leads Peden among those concerned about the war in
Iraq, the economy, taxes, health care, immigration, moral values,
and "other." Peden leads Paul only among those concerned about
education.
Paul does less well in the presidential race. According to this
poll, he is carrying a respectable 18 percent of the district's
voters but this still puts him in third place. John McCain would
carry the district with 49 percent and Mike Huckabee would come in
second with 27 percent. McCain wins 70 percent of those voting on
the basis of the war. So are the congressional primary voters whose
top issue is Iraq different from the presidential war voters? Or do
they somehow not know about Paul's antiwar views or McCain's
hawkishness?
It's just one poll, but it is closer to the results the Paul
campaign has been pushing than the numbers cited in the recent
Pajamas Media story.
topics:
Taxes, Education, Health Care, John McCain, Iraq, Immigration