Rasmussen New Hampshire 2012 GOP Primary Survey
Survey of 750 likely Republican primary voters was conducted September 21, 2011. The margin of error is ± 4 percentage points.
- Mitt Romney 39%
- Rick Perry 18%
- Ron Paul 13%
- Jon Huntsman 7%
- Michele Bachmann 5%
- Newt Gingrich 4%
- Herman Cain 4%
- Rick Santorum 2%
- Some other candidate 3%
- Undecided 4%
Favorable / Unfavorable {Net}
- Mitt Romney 77% / 21% {+56%}
- Rick Perry 61% / 33% {+28%}
- Ron Paul 51% / 44% {+7%}
Inside the numbers:
Romney leads even more decisively among female primary voters in New Hampshire with 44% support to Perry’s 18%. He holds a two-to-one lead over the Texas governor – 35% to 18% - among male voters.
Among Tea Party voters, the race is much narrower, with Romney posting a 30% to 26% lead over Perry. Non-members prefer Romney over Perry 45% to 14%.
Unaffiliated voters can vote in the state’s GOP Primary, and among those voters Romney earns 34% support with Paul in second place at 19%. Huntsman gets 15% support from unaffiliateds, followed by Perry at 12%.
But just 34% of all likely GOP primary voters in the state are certain how they will vote at this time, and Romney leads Perry 43% to 17% among these voters. Paul also has 17% support within this group.
Seventy-seven percent (77%) of likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire hold a favorable opinion of Romney, including 32% with a Very Favorable one. Only 21% view him unfavorably, with six percent (6%) Very Unfavorable.
Perry is seen favorably by 61% and unfavorably by 33%. This includes 22% with a Very Favorable regard for him and 17% with a Very Unfavorable opinion.
Fifty-one percent (51%) share a favorable opinion of Paul, while 44% view him unfavorably. These findings include 20% who see him Very Favorably and 18% with a Very Unfavorable view.
Seventy-seven percent (77%) of GOP voters in the Granite State disapprove of the job President Obama is doing, with 66% who Strongly Disapprove.
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