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Getbig Main Boards => Politics and Political Issues Board => Topic started by: Dos Equis on March 10, 2007, 11:01:16 AM
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Poll: Character Trumps Policy for VotersRON FOURNIER and TREVOR TOMPSON | AP | March 10, 2007 12:41 PM EST
WASHINGTON — For all the policy blueprints churned out by presidential campaigns, there is this indisputable fact: People care less about issues than they do about a candidate's character.
A new Associated Press-Ipsos poll says 55 percent of those surveyed consider honesty, integrity and other values of character the most important qualities they look for in a presidential candidate.
Just one-third look first to candidates' stances on issues; even fewer focus foremost on leadership traits, experience or intelligence.
"Voters only look at policies as a lens into what type of person the candidate is," said Ken Mehlman, chairman of President Bush's 2004 re-election campaign. That campaign based its voter targeting and messaging strategies on the character-first theory.
The AP-Ipsos poll of 1,001 adults, conducted Monday through Wednesday, found honesty was by far the most popular single trait _ volunteered by 41 percent of voters in open-ended questioning.
The results might have been different had respondents been forced to choose between either issues or character. But this survey allowed people to volunteer any "qualities or characteristics," and a minority seized on issues.
The findings are consistent with an AP-Ipsos poll from September 2004, when 38 percent of voters chose honesty as the most important quality when picking a president. That was more than any other factor.
At the time of that survey, a majority of voters found Bush to be honest.
His decline in the category of trust is widely attributed to the fallout from the Iraq war and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The drop is most prominent among people 30 to 39, suburban women, married women with children and people with household incomes in the $50,000 to $75,000 bracket.
Bush's collapse in the character test should serve as a warning to the 2008 presidential candidates. Character matters, voters say, and they already are sizing up the field.
Among Republican and GOP-leaning voters, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani leads Arizona Sen. John McCain 35 percent to 22 percent. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich had 14 percent, followed in the single digits by former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas.
Giuliani leads the pack among voters who look first to a candidate's character, issues and leadership qualities. The only area when McCain pulls even to Giuliani is among voters who cite experience as the most important quality or characteristic in a president.
Among Democrats, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York leads with 38 percent, followed by Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois at 21 percent. Former Vice President Al Gore is at 14 percent and 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards is at 10 percent. The rest of the field is in single digits.
Clinton leads Obama among voters who mention honesty and strong character, compassion, intelligence and stance on issues. The former first lady is tied with Obama among the small number of respondents who value experience, a surprise given Obama's short stint in Washington.
Policies may not get candidates elected. But politicians can use their policies to connect with voters at a gut level.
Former President Clinton's book-length economic blueprint showed voters he would work hard to tackle problems they cared about. His empathy was a winning trait in 1992.
Bush won re-election in 2004 when most people were opposed to the war in Iraq. He used the against-the-grain war policy to cast himself as a strong, decisive leader. It worked until voters started doubting his honesty and competence in 2005.
"Modern day presidential campaigns are essentially character tests, with character broadly defined to encompass a mosaic of traits _ looks, likability, vision, philosophy, ideology, biography, communications skills, intelligence, strength, optimism, empathy, ethics, values, among others," said Democratic strategist Chris Lehane of California.
Steffen Schmidt, political science professor at Iowa State University, said the 2008 field faces many challenges in the character contest. The top half-dozen or so candidates have had their honesty or integrity called into question already, including relative newcomer Obama.
"The problem is it's almost impossible to find a human being who lives up to the expectations of voters. Everyone has things they've done that they're not proud of," Schmidt said. "Nobody's character is perfect."
The poll had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. For Democrats and Republicans, it was 4.5 percentage points.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070310/ap-poll-2008-traits
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Poll: Character Trumps Policy for VotersRON FOURNIER and TREVOR TOMPSON | AP | March 10, 2007 12:41 PM EST
Weird.
When there's a Scripps poll showing 1/3 of Americans believe it was a self-attack, you say polls are BS.
Number of people polled in Scripps: 1,010.
When there's an AP poll showing 55% of americans choose character over policy, you believe it.
Number of people polled in AP: 1,001.
You smell that? It's hypocrisy on your part.
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Oh no. I am convinced by your statement that "one out of three people you see on the street believes 911 was an inside job." ::)
Character matters. Dumb, incomprehensible, ridiculous, impossible, nutty conspiracy theories do not.
Voters want integrity, trustworthiness, and fidelity from their candidates. They could care less about some Twilight Zone conspiracy.
Hope that helps. :)
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beach bum,
you're pretty shitty at this debate thing.
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George Bush seems like he has good Character, I would love to go out and drink with him. He seems like a man who's really easy to get along with.
Just not the kind of guy that can lead a country.
The President of the United States.....