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WPA Research (R) Iowa 2016 GOP Caucus Poll
- Mike Huckabee 14%
- Rand Paul 10%
- Scott Walker 8%
- Paul Ryan 7%
- Jeb Bush 7%
- Ted Cruz 7%
- Chris Christie 6%
- Rick Santorum 5%
- Rick Perry 3%
- Marco Rubio 3%
- Bobby Jindal 2%
- Someone else 2%
- Undecided 26%
Survey of 402 Republican voters was conducted March 30, 2014.
WPA Research (R) 2016 GOP Nomination Poll
- Rand Paul 13%
- Mike Huckabee 13%
- Jeb Bush 11%
- Chris Christie 9%
- Ted Cruz 9%
- Paul Ryan 6%
- Marco Rubio 6%
- Scott Walker 5%
- Bobby Jindal 3%
- Rick Santorum 3%
- Rick Perry 1%
Survey of 801 Republicans and GOP-leaning
Independents was conducted March 18-20, 2014.
Inside the numbers:
The survey also showed that the Republican and Republican-leaning respondents surveyed believed that Mr. Paul, Mr. Christie and Mr. Bush had the best chance of beating Hillary Clinton in a hypothetical general election showdown.
“Christie is clearly not the first choice among GOP voters overall, but when you look at which candidate Republicans believe can beat Hillary Clinton there is evidence that the theory a moderate Republican can beat a liberal Democrat still holds some sway,” the pollster noted.
WPA Research (R) Iowa 2012 GOP Caucus Survey
- Rick Perry 23%
- Michele Bachmann 20%
- Mitt Romney 16%
- Ron Paul 9%
- Herman Cain 8%
- Rick Santorum 7%
- Newt Gingrich 3%
- Jon Huntsman 2%
- Thad McCotter 0%
- Undecided/Not sure 12%
Between Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry, and Mitt Romney, who would you think would be the best at creating jobs and improving the economy?
- Rick Perry 38%
- Mitt Romney 27%
- Michele Bachmann 18%
Between Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry, and Mitt Romney, who do you believe has the best chance to defeat Barack Obama for president?
- Rick Perry 41%
- Mitt Romney 24%
- Michele Bachmann 13%
Survey of 402 likely Republican caucus-goers was conducted August 21-22, 2011 for the Make Us Great Again PAC, a Rick Perry-favored Super PAC. The margin of error is +/- 4.9 percentage points.
Inside the numbers:
Self-described "very conservative" voters favor Perry, at 30 percent, over Bachmann, at 23 percent, and Cain, at 10 percent (Romney got 9 percent, as did Santorum). And those who described themselves as "a Tea Party conservative concerned about spending, the federal debt, and protecting the U.S. Constitution" also had Perry on top, with 30 percent, followed by Bachmann, at 22 percent and Paul at 13 percent.