Quinnipiac University: December 2008 Archives

In another poll on who should fill the Hillary Clinton seat, voters in New York say 33 percent to 29 percent that Gov. David Paterson should name Caroline Kennedy over Attorney General Andrew Cuomo even though they are split on whether she is qualified, with 41 percent saying she's not and 40 percent saying she is, according to a Quinnipiac University survey conducted Dec. 17-21. The margin of error is 3.4 points.

Voters believe Paterson will pick Kennedy by a 48 percent to 25 percent margin.

Two previous polls differed on voter preferences. a Public Policy Polling survey conducted Dec. 8-11 had Kennedy way ahead of Cuomo at 44 percent to 23 percent. A Siena College poll docuted Dec. 8-11 had Cuomo edging Kennedy 26 percent to 23 percent overall, and by 30 percent to 28 percent among Democrats.

There are warning signs on the horizon for two Republican senators up for re-election in 2010 - first-termer Richard Burr of North Carolina and two-termer George Voinovich of Ohio, according to polls looking ahead to the next election cycle.

cooper copy.gifn North Carolina, a Public Policy Polling survey conducted Dec. 8-9 said that Democratic Attorney General Roy Cooper leads Burr in a hypothetical match-up by 39 percent to 34 percent with 26 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.9 percent. Thirty-two percent of voters approve of the job Burr is doing, 31 percent do not and 37 percent say they are not sure. Burr's approval to disapproval ratio is 44 percent to 23 percent with 34 percent not sure. PPP notes that Burr leads Cooper among white voters by just six points when a Republican usually needs about a 20 point cushion to win in the state.