A One-Party People's Republic
- The corrupt 2018 California general election ballot for Governor might once again feature a Democrat vs Democrat race.
- The highest ranking candidate of the open borders GOP registers a pitiful 8% in the polls.
- The GOP is not even running a candidate for U.S. Senate. It will be a Democrat vs. Democrat in November.
(Politico) - The California governor’s race has suddenly turned into a Democratic nail-biter.
Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has climbed to within two percentage points of longtime frontrunner Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to a new poll by the Public Policy Institute of California.
The former San Francisco mayor’s once-formidable lead over Villaraigosa — numerous polls gave him a double-digit advantage — has now collapsed to a 23 percent to 21 percent edge among likely California voters, well within the non-partisan poll’s margin of error.
“Two Democrats are in a virtual tie in the top-two gubernatorial primary. But a quarter of likely voters are undecided — as many as support either of the front-runners,” said pollster Mark Baldassare, PPIC president and CEO. The poll of 1,705 California residents was taken January 21–30.
Under California’s “top two” or jungle primary system, the top two candidates in the June 5 primary, regardless of their party affiliation, will continue on to the November general election.
Other Candidates:
- Democratic state Treasurer John Chiang at 9%
- Republican Assemblyman Travis Allen (8%)
- Republican businessman John Cox (7%),
- Democrat Delaine Eastin (4%)
- former GOP Rep. Doug Ose (3%)
No Republican for Senate
As Dianne Feinstein seeks a fifth term in the US Senate, she leads de León (46% to 17%), with a third of likely voters (33%) undecided. Two-thirds of Democratic likely voters (67%) support Feinstein, 19 percent support de León, and 13 percent are undecided.
With no prominent Republicans in the race, about two-thirds of Republican likely voters (65%) are undecided.
Among independent likely voters, 41 percent favor Feinstein, 16 percent favor de León, and 39 percent are undecided. Feinstein leads de León by double digits across regions and racial/ethnic groups, and among men (39% to 16%) and women (51% to 18%).
1 comment:
is a passing trend
soon californians realize they are been fooled
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