[NYTr] Colbert Finishes Ahead of Richardson In Dem Primary Poll
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Oct 22 18:22:45 EDT 2007
Washingron Post blogs - Oct 22, 2007
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/thefix/2007/10/the_colbert_effect.html
Poll Tries to Measure Colbert Effect
By Chris Cillizza
You don't need The Fix to state the obvious: Stephen Colbert is
everywhere right now.
Following the announcement of his presidential ambitions last week,
Colbert has chalked up quite a run of political coverage, capping the
week with an appearance on ultimate establishment Washington TV show:
"Meet the Press".
And now, we have national poll results detailing Colbert's chances --
and, no, we aren't kidding.
Public Opinion Strategies, a Republican polling firm, recently
completed a national poll of 1,000 likely 2008 voters that included
Colbert's name in both the GOP and Democratic primaries. (He has
announced his plans to run in both the Democratic and Republican
primaries.) In the field from Oct. 18-21, the survey has a 5 percent
margin of error.
In the Democratic primary, Colbert takes 2.3 percent of the vote --
good for fifth place behind Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (40 percent),
Sen. Barack Obama (19 percent), former Sen. John Edwards (12 percent)
and Sen. Joe Biden (2.7 percent. Colbert finished ahead of Gov. Bill
Richardson (2.1 percent), Rep. Dennis Kucinich (2.1 percent) and former
Sen. Mike Gravel (less than 1 percent).
He was less lucky in the Republican field, where he took less than 1
percent of the vote behind even longshot candidates like Reps. Tom
Tancredo and Ron Paul. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani led the
Republican field with 29 percent, followed by former Gov. Mitt Romney
at 12 percent, former Sen. Fred Thompson (11 percent) and Sen. John
McCain (10 percent).
"It's clear that Colbert's truthiness image and 'I am America' message
has serious resonance among Democrats," said Neil Newhouse, a POS
partner.
Yes, we know that Colbert's bid is satire and nothing more. But anyone
who follows politics as closely as we do knows that it even serious
politics often devolves into theater of the absurd. So why shouldn't
Colbert be another actor in the real 2008 race?
For even more on Colbert and his impact (or lack thereof) on the race,
check out Fix Friend Josh Green's piece over at the Atlantic Online.
Good stuff. http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200710u/colbert-campaign
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