Thursday, May 5, 2011

Most voters say "no" to Palin or Trump in 2012

NEW YORK  - almost 60 percent of Americans never would support a presidential Republican former Governor of Alaska Sarah Palin or real estate and reality TV star Donald Trump, according to a new poll Wednesday.


Trump, who has tested the waters for a run 2012 as possible for the Republican presidential inauguration, said that it might announce something before June, after his reality show TV, "Celebrity Apprentice", ends his season may 22.


Palin was the candidate Republican 2008 vice and keeps fans guessing on whether if it will be executed.


The poll from the Quinnipiac University of casernés voters found that almost half would examine or be enthusiastic choir, former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney or former Governor of Arkansas Mike Huckabee in the election of November 2012.


"Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee are in better shape." "Sarah Palin and Donald Trump suffer from the reality that, as our mothers told us,"you've never a second chance to make a first impression"," said Peter Brown, Assistant Director of the Quinnipiac University polling Institute.


Among voters Republican-leaning independent and Republican 613, the survey showed Romney favorite to win the presidential nomination Republican with 18%, followed by Huckabee and Palin with 15 percent and Trump with 12%.


Governor of Indiana Mitch Daniels and the House of representatives former President Newt Gingrich each have 5 per cent, while former Governor of Minnesota Tim Pawlenty and the Minnesota Michele Bachmann representative and both on 4 per cent.


The margin of error for this subset has been more or less 4 percentage points.


The telephone survey between April 16 and may 1, came out on the eve of a debate in South Carolina among a handful of potential Republican candidates, none of these large names.


The margin of error for the largest group was 2.6 percentage points.

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