Author Topic: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee  (Read 121898 times)

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #350 on: August 24, 2015, 04:30:03 PM »
The Messiah has spoken.

Obama gives Joe Biden 'blessing' for 2016 bid

By Jeff Zeleny and Peter Morris, CNN
Updated Mon August 24, 2015

Washington (CNN)Vice President Joe Biden received President Barack Obama's "blessing" to make a 2016 bid for the White House, according to a senior Democrat.

But that's if Biden chooses to run -- the decision is his, the source said.

Biden met with the President for one of their regularly scheduled lunch meetings Monday.

Later in the evening, Biden is turning to a pair of President Barack Obama's most trusted advisers as he deepens his examination of how to mount a successful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.

The Vice President was expected to huddle at his residence Monday night with Anita Dunn and Bob Bauer, the husband-and-wife team who have been at Obama's side for much of the last decade, two people familiar with the meeting told CNN. Steve Ricchetti, the Vice President's chief of staff, was also expected to attend.

"As a general rule, we are not going to confirm the Vice President's private meetings or provide a readout of them," an aide to the Vice President told CNN on Monday.

Dunn, a former White House communications director, and Bauer, a longtime lawyer to Obama, were among those invited to a meeting at the Naval Observatory in Washington. Ted Kaufman, a loyal Biden confidant who briefly occupied his Senate seat from Delaware, was also among those gathering to discuss how -- not whether -- Biden could run, if he decides to do so.

Biden is leaning toward running, several people involved in discussions tell CNN, but they stress that he has not yet firmly made up his mind to launch a candidacy.

The meeting on Monday night, along with his private session on Saturday with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, underscores the length he is going to explore a run.

While many top Democrats have already signed onto Hillary Clinton's candidacy, several former Obama advisers tell CNN they would work for Biden if he jumps into the race. Dunn and Bauer would be a high-profile addition to any potential campaign, and could send a signal to other Democrats that they should join Biden's effort. It is not known if they would ultimately work for Biden if he does enter the race.

Bauer is one of the top Democratic election lawyers in Washington, who helped guide Obama's presidential campaign eight years ago. Dunn, a veteran of presidential campaigns, served as a communications director during Obama's first term. She was also an adviser to former Sen. Tom Daschle, the Democratic leader.

Key Democratic fundraisers have been invited to a meeting with Biden after Labor Day, a source close to Biden confirmed to CNN.

The meeting, first reported by The Washington Post, is scheduled to be held at the Naval Observatory and is expected to occur the week after Labor Day.

The source characterizes the session as "one of several logical and necessary steps" the Vice President needs to take to get the best sense of the terrain. The source also says outreach to other party leaders is also planned.

The source says nothing is decided or firm about the Vice President's intentions but conversations are ongoing and deliberations could take most of September as Biden decides whether to enter the presidential race.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/24/politics/joe-biden-obama-blessing-2016/index.html

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #351 on: August 25, 2015, 11:14:16 AM »
 :o

Should Hillary Clinton Suspend Her Campaign?
Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Growing national security questions about Hillary Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server during her time as secretary of State are drowning out much of her message as a presidential candidate and causing many of her fellow Democrats to worry about the future of her campaign. Is it time for Clinton to put her campaign on temporary hold?

Voters are almost evenly divided on that question: the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 46% of Likely U.S. Voters believe Clinton should suspend her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination until all of the legal questions about her use of the private e-mail server are resolved. Nearly as many (44%) disagree. Nine percent (9%) are undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

Even one-in-four Democrats (24%) agree that the front-runner for their party’s nomination should suspend her campaign for the time being. But that compares to 73% of Republicans and 46% of voters not affiliated with either major party.

Forty-five percent (45%) of all voters - but only 18% of Democrats - now consider the national security questions raised about Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server while serving as secretary of State to be a serious scandal. Twenty-eight percent (28%) of likely voters consider the matter an embarrassing situation, while nearly as many (23%) say it’s no big deal.

At the same time, Vice President Joe Biden is reportedly moving closer to a decision whether to challenge Clinton for the Democratic nomination because of her e-mail woes. Our latest Hillary Meter shows the former first lady losing ground noticeably among voters, but Democrats weren’t overly enthusiastic about a Biden run earlier this month.

Clinton has been far and away the leader of the Democratic presidential pack in surveys for months.  Rasmussen Reports will release its latest numbers from the Democratic presidential race at 8:30 a.m. Eastern tomorrow.

The survey of 1,000 Likely Voters was conducted on August 23-24, 2015 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.

As recently as a month ago (and there have been additional questions raised since then), 54% of voters already felt Clinton’s use of a private, non-government provider for her e-mail while serving as secretary of State raises serious national security concerns.

Men believe a bit more strongly than women that Clinton should temporarily suspend her campaign. White voters are nearly twice as likely as black voters to think she should put her campaign on hold. Other minority voters tend to oppose that idea.

Middle-income voters are stronger advocates of a campaign hold than those in other income brackets.

Voters who approve of the job President Obama is doing are strongly opposed to Clinton suspending her campaign. Most voters who disapprove of the president’s job performance think she should take a break until the legal questions about the e-mail server are resolved.

Just 37% of all voters say they trust Clinton. Sixty-three percent (63%) think it’s likely some actions Clinton took as secretary of State were influenced by donations made to the Clinton Foundation. This includes 42% who say it’s Very Likely.

Additional information from this survey and a full demographic breakdown are available to Platinum Members only.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/elections/election_2016/should_hillary_clinton_suspend_her_campaign

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #352 on: August 25, 2015, 11:18:08 AM »
73% of Republicans

LOL @ the 27% that told the interviewer "Nah, I like Hilary, she should stay in the race..."

They're probably Trump supporters.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #353 on: August 26, 2015, 10:59:36 AM »
GOP revels in Joe Biden buzz
After months of enduring Trump and clown-car cracks, Republicans are enjoying watching Democrats squirm.
By KATIE GLUECK
8/26/15

AP Photos

Republicans, sick of being derided by Democrats as the clown car party, are downright gleeful that Joe Biden appears to be squeezing in next to Hillary Clinton.

After enduring months of ridicule fueled by Donald Trump, whose frequent outrageous comments have forced a number of GOP rivals into a corner, and as a seemingly endless parade of Republican contenders have jumped into the presidential race, there’s a sense of schadenfreude at the idea of Biden mounting a late-in-the-game run and mixing up the Democratic field.

“We’re constantly denounced as a circus, a clown show, a clown car,” said GOP pollster Kellyanne Conway, adding that competition has been good for the Republican field. But, she went on to add, “Pardon us if we’ve got the giggles over watching the Democrats, the so-called Democratic front-runner, hear [competitors’] footsteps and what was meant to be a runaway victory, what was meant to be a coronation, becomes their own … version of a clown car.”

As chatter about a possible Biden bid has intensified over the past several days, plenty of Republicans are sounding more like Biden cheerleaders — even Biden consultants — than political foes, delighting in gaming out how Biden could emerge as a credible challenger to Clinton and knock out the sense of coronation that has lingered around her, even as she battles scandal-tinged headlines.

“Oh, Run Joe Run,” said Conway, who is also president of a super PAC backing Ted Cruz.

“I’d love to see Joe Biden get into the race,” said GOP strategist and former Mitt Romney spokesman Ryan Williams. “He would be a formidable candidate.”

Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) has been tweeting stories bearing headlines such as “Hillary vs. Biden Would Get Ugly Fast” and “Top Democratic fundraisers invited to meet with Joe Biden at Naval Observatory.”

And the Republican National Committee has been blasting out examples of the White House speaking highly of the vice president, seeking to suggest that Obama would lean toward his second-in-command rather than his former secretary of state.

“A Biden candidacy will divide the White House and could fracture the Democrat establishment — especially if Clinton can’t turn things around or stumbles even further,” said RNC spokesman Michael Short, explaining the Biden boosterism.

Biden has yet to publicly announce his intentions but is said to be heavily considering a run, with a decision expected by the end of the summer. His desire to mount another run (after failing to clinch the Democratic nomination in 1988 and 2008) is said to be motivated in part by the recent death of his son Beau Biden, who reportedly wanted his dad to run, and comes as Clinton has suffered endless headlines about her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state and questions about conflicts of interest regarding the Clinton Foundation.

It’s not that Clinton is running alone. She already has several challengers, including Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has gained some traction among progressives in the party. But in the eyes of Republicans, the fact that Biden, the sitting vice president, is mulling a late-entry run, is a sign of Clinton’s vulnerabilities.

“Vice President Joe Biden’s potential entry into the Democratic Primary means one thing and one thing only — Secretary Clinton is in trouble,” said Jeff Bechdel, communications director for the GOP opposition research group America Rising PAC, in a statement. “Clinton has inflicted so much damage on herself through scandals involving her private email and the Clinton Foundation that she has provided an opening for Biden.”

A representative for Clinton didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Republicans are hopeful that Biden, a seasoned politician who is respected on both sides of the aisle, would emerge as a credible contender who, at the least, would be taken seriously should he draw contrasts with Clinton. They also believe Biden would eat into some of her support among centrist Democrats, weakening Clinton by dipping into her base.

“If Biden can get any kind of traction, any momentum, it will further add to all of the problems Hillary Clinton has to deal with. And getting through the nominating season, it adds all kinds of extra pressure that they weren’t really counting on at the beginning of this race. It’s just another prominent voice that’s going to show a contrast with Hillary Clinton,” the RNC’s Short said in a separate conversation.

Many Democrats, and some Republicans, say that’s wishful thinking — Clinton is still overwhelmingly expected to be her party’s nominee, and some think a more contested primary would make her stronger, as was the case for now-President Barack Obama when he ran against Clinton in 2008.

But if nothing else, Republicans say, the colorful Biden would ensure that it’s not just the GOP in the sensationalist spotlight.

Biden, who can be an emotional speaker, has a long record of getting carried away, or getting ahead of himself or the administration, such as when he blurted out full support for same-sex marriage before that was the position held by the White House. While he is currently still raw from the death of his son, Biden is known for using off-color language and for public displays of affection, and after the summer of Trump, Republicans wouldn’t mind sharing the attention.

“Biden is good for a laugh at least once a week,” said New Hampshire GOP operative Dave Carney. “For anyone in the business of generating clicks, he’s almost as good as Trump.”

But the GOP hope that Biden would substantially shake up the Democratic race is predicated on a lot of “ifs.” It’s not at all clear that Biden will actually get into the race; if he does, he could easily fall flat — as he did in 2008, when he ran against Clinton and Obama — and there’s no guarantee that he would criticize Clinton off the bat, much less that he would do so effectively.

“It’s not like they’ve got fundamental policy differences,” said Fergus Cullen, a former chairman of the New Hampshire Republican Party who does not think that Biden will deliver on all of those GOP dreams. “Both are establishment Democrats. It’s not like he’s younger … both are former senators. What does he bring to the table, except maybe a little less baggage than Hillary? I just don’t understand it. I think people are being overly polite.”

Bill Kristol, the influential conservative editor of The Weekly Standard, does not think Biden should be dismissed — “I’m not one of those who thinks Biden is a buffoon,” he said — but at the same time doesn’t think the vice president himself will cause the kind of damage to Clinton other Republicans are betting on. But Biden’s possible entry does send the message that the field isn’t settled yet, Kristol continued, painting a picture of a long-shot scenario in which other candidates, possibly even progressive favorite Elizabeth Warren, who has repeatedly ruled out a run, jump in later.

“It does create more fluidity in general in the race,” he said. “If you watch Trump, and Biden gets in, it feels like a crazy year. All the rules are being broken.”

http://www.politico.com/story/2015/08/gop-revels-in-joe-biden-buzz-121743.html#ixzz3jweuKaQA

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #354 on: August 28, 2015, 12:50:48 PM »
Clinton Camp Says One-Fifth of Delegates Secured for Nomination
Aug 28, 2015

As Vice President Joe Biden considers a potential run, Hillary Clinton's campaign is seeking to project dominance at the Democratic National Commitee meeting in Minneapolis.

As Hillary Clinton's campaign seeks to project dominance in a field that could soon include Vice President Joe Biden, her top advisers are touting a decisive edge on a little-discussed metric: superdelegate commitments.

At the Democratic National Committee meeting in Minneapolis, where she will speak Friday, senior Clinton campaign officials are claiming that she has already secured one-fifth of the pledges needed to win the Democratic presidential nomination. They come from current and former elected officials, committee officeholders, and other party dignitaries.

The campaign says that Clinton currently has about 130 superdelegates publicly backing her, but a person familiar with recent conversations in Minneapolis said that officials are telling supporters and the undecided in the last few days that private commitments increase that number to more than 440—about 20 percent of the number of delegates she would need to secure the nomination.

Clinton campaign aides at the DNC meeting are privately briefing uncommitted superdelegates there on their mounting totals as a way to coax them to get them aboard the Clinton train now. Campaign manager Robby Mook, chief administrative officer Charlie Baker, political director Amanda Renteria, and state campaigns and political engagement director Marlon Marshall are among top Clinton aides in attendance.

Final numbers are still in flux, but current estimates peg the total number of delegates to next summer’s presidential nominating convention at about 4,491, meaning that a candidate would need 2,246 to win. The Clinton camp’s claim to more than 440 delegates means she’s already wrapped up the support of more than 60 percent of the approximately 713 superdelegates who, under party rules, are among those who cast votes for the nomination, along with delegates selected by rank-and-file voters in primaries and caucuses beginning next February. Delegate totals won’t be finalized until the DNC determines the number of bonus delegates awarded to states, a party official said.

To be sure, Clinton had a superdelegate edge early against Barack Obama in 2008, and superdelegates are free to change their allegiance at any time between now and next summer's convention. But Clinton is ahead of the pace she had eight years ago in securing these commitments, and her support from the core of the establishment represented by these superdelegates is arguably the most tangible evidence of the difficulty Biden would have overtaking her with a late-starting campaign.

While Clinton said earlier this week that Biden “should have the space and the opportunity to decide what he wants to do,” her campaign is at the same time flexing its muscles to stress the strength of her candidacy. The campaign this week unveiled its first endorsement from a sitting member of the Obama Cabinet, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who just happens to be a former governor of Iowa and who spent Wednesday touring the state with Clinton.

The Clinton campaign also released memos on Thursday touting the strength of its field operations in the early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada. The memos include specific tallies of thousands of volunteer commitments, dozens of paid organizers, and offices opened, including 11 in Iowa.

Barring some major scandal or controversy, and given Hillary and Bill Clinton's long-standing ties to Democratic Party elites, overcoming her superdelegate edge would be quite a challenge for Biden or the major candidates already competing against her for the nomination, including Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

The 300-or-so gap between Clinton's public and private superdelegate commitments derives mostly from state party officials who have yet to reveal their backing of the frontrunner, but have privately pledged to cast their convention votes for the former first lady, according to the person familiar with the campaign's tally.

In their Minneapolis discussions intended to persuade additional uncommitted superdelegates to commit to Clinton, her team is taking care not to mention Biden, but the message is clear: Much of the party establishment is supporting Clinton and the math is in her favor. In 2008, Clinton’s team made a version of this argument before being overtaken by Barack Obama. After Obama took the lead in overall delegates, his campaign began to make a comparable argument about the mathematical inevitability of his ultimate victory.

http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-08-28/clinton-camp-saying-it-already-secured-one-fifth-the-delegates-needed-for-nomination

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #355 on: August 28, 2015, 01:08:59 PM »
Wouldn't be a good idea for Biden.  He isn't popular enough and historically, VPs have never done well when they ran as the head of the ticket.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #356 on: August 28, 2015, 06:32:41 PM »
Wouldn't be a good idea for Biden.  He isn't popular enough and historically, VPs have never done well when they ran as the head of the ticket.

Good point

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #357 on: August 28, 2015, 11:57:10 PM »
Wouldn't be a good idea for Biden.  He isn't popular enough and historically, VPs have never done well when they ran as the head of the ticket.

the odds have improved drastically in recent times - a great read here.  Biden would do okay.  but his heart isn't in it.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jonathan-hobratsch/when-vice-presidents-run_b_4922047.html

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #358 on: August 31, 2015, 02:42:33 PM »
Biden Beloved by Top Democrats; His Candidacy, Not So Much

Image: Biden Beloved by Top Democrats; His Candidacy, Not So Much
Friday, 28 Aug 2015

MINNEAPOLIS -- Joe Biden got plenty of love from top Democrats on Friday, but their views about a possible White House run by the vice president were decidedly more mixed.

While Biden was nowhere near the summer meeting of the Democratic National Committee, his potential late entry into the party's presidential race against front-runner Hillary Clinton dominated conversations in meeting rooms and hallways.

In more than a dozen interviews, top Democrats expressed admiration and affection for Biden, but several cast doubt on whether he should get in the race. Some questioned whether his late start would keep him from making much headway.

Special: Engineers Call This the ‘Solar Panel Killer’
"I like Joe Biden. We all love him," said Alice Huffman of California, president of the state's NAACP. "But I don't see him overtaking Hillary."

Earl Fowlkes, chairman of the party's LGBT caucus, said Biden was "a good man, a solid man" but wondered whether he would excite the minority and young voters who Democrats rely on in presidential elections.

"The question is, can he raise the money?" Fowlkes said. "If he doesn't have the money, he won't make much difference."

Three Democrats interviewed said they would probably back Biden if he gets in, citing their appreciation for his service to President Barack Obama and his long experience in the U.S. Senate.

"He would probably be my candidate," said Elena McCullough of the Tampa, Florida, area. "He's done a great job, he's been serving our country for a long time."

Sonia Fernandez, of Los Angeles, also said she would probably back Biden because "I would like to see the continuation of the progress we've seen with President Obama."

Biden, 72, has been huddling with advisers to decide whether to challenge Clinton, who has struggled to overcome fallout from her use of a private email server while working as the nation's top diplomat.

Clinton still holds a big lead in opinion polls in the race to pick a nominee for the November 2016 election, but has taken a hit on her personal favorability and trustworthiness.

Clinton and three other Democratic candidates - Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley and former Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee - addressed party leaders at the meeting.

Speaking to reporters afterward, Clinton also expressed her admiration for Biden but refused to be drawn into a discussion about his possible candidacy. Sanders said he was uncertain what, if anything, Biden's entry in the race would mean.

"I guess we will have to wait and see," he said.

Biden held a conference call with DNC members on Wednesday in which he said he was still giving a lot of thought to a late entry but was unsure if he had the energy or commitment for it.

Editor's Note: Do You Have These Alzheimer's Warning Signs? Rate Your Memory Now.
Biden's eldest son, Beau Biden, a former Delaware attorney general, died of cancer in May at age 46.

Karen Yarbrough, Illinois state vice chairwoman for the party, said she had not decided on a candidate yet but did not think Biden's decision would make much difference.

"I don't know if he would change anything for me," she said, adding she was "leaning" toward supporting Clinton.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/Joe-Biden-Democrats-2016/2015/08/28/id/672510/#ixzz3kQnSiIPR

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #359 on: August 31, 2015, 02:43:57 PM »
Iowa Poll: Bernie Sanders Just 7 Points Behind Hillary

Image: Iowa Poll: Bernie Sanders Just 7 Points Behind Hillary
Saturday, 29 Aug 2015

In a huge new shocker for Democrats, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has closed to within 7 points of Hillary Clinton in the Democratic presidential race in the key state of Iowa.

While Clinton is still ahead with 37 percent of likely Democratic caucus-goers in Iowa, Sanders is now the choice for 30 percent of Democrat, according to the Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics Iowa Poll released Saturday evening.

That means that Clinton has lost a staggering third of her total supports since May, and increases the risk that she could once again lose the Iowa contest like she did in 2008. Also, it’s the first time the former secretary of state has dropped below the 50 percent mark in four polls conducted by the Register and Bloomberg Politics this year.

Vice President Joe Biden, who is still mulling a run and sounding out donors, has yet to make much of a mark in Iowa. Biden has the backing of just 14 percent of respondents. The Iowa vote is scheduled for Feb. 1.

"This feels like 2008 all over again," J. Ann Selzer, pollster for the Iowa Poll, told the Register. That year, Clinton was ahead of John Edwards by 6 percentage points and then Sen. Barack Obama by 7 points in an early October Iowa Poll. But Obama surged ahead by late November.

In May, the Iowa Poll put Clinton, a former secretary of state, U.S. senator and first lady, at 57 percent, Sanders at 16 percent, and Biden at 8 percent.
"It looks like what people call the era of inevitability is over," said Selzer, president of West Des Moines, Iowa- based Selzer & Co., which conducted the poll. "She has lost a third of the support that she had in May, so any time you lose that much that quickly, it’s a wake-up call."

The decline in Clinton's rating in the poll comes despite her dominance of the local broadcast airwaves. During the past month, she was the only Democratic candidate or political action committee advertising on Iowa broadcast television stations. The heavy Clinton buy, which aired in Des Moines and Cedar Rapids, focused on her biography and her record as a champion of American families. According to Kantar/CMAG data, the Clinton campaign was not only unopposed on the Democratic side, but had more than twice as many spots in the markets where it bought, than all Republican advertising combined.

Biden, who is expected to make a decision about whether to enter the race by the end of September, placed ahead of several declared candidates. If Biden is not in the race, the poll shows Clinton leading Sanders by 43 percent to 35 percent. The margin of error on the full sample of likely Democratic caucus-goers is plus or minus 4.9 percentage points

The biggest surprise is Sanders. Unlike his recent strong showing in New Hampshire polls, his performance here cannot be dismissed as a result of the Vermont lawmaker’s regional appeal.

The survey of 404 likely Democratic caucus attendees, conducted Aug. 23-26, shows the self-declared socialist, who serves as an independent in the U.S. Senate, packing a powerful appeal in the nation's rural heartland. In the last two months Sanders' favorability rating has jumped to 73 percent from 57 percent among likely Democratic caucus-goers.

"On paper, he’s not the kind of candidate that traditionally ends up as the nominee," Selzer said of Sanders. "But he’s making them feel good about being a Democrat."

Sanders' rise reflects an anti-establishment mood that’s playing out across the country in both parties, elevating Republican contenders such as billionaire Donald Trump and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson while frustrating candidates such as former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, the son and brother of two past U.S. presidents.

Sanders is being buoyed by a coalition that looks uncannily like the one that helped Barack Obama topple Clinton from the front of the Democratic field in 2008: young people, liberals and first-time caucus-goers. Sanders draws 50 percent of the support of likely Democratic caucus-goers under the age of 45, well above Clinton’s 27 percent and Biden’s 8 percent. Sanders has a five percentage point lead over Clinton among self- described liberals. Among Democrats who plan to attend their first caucus in 2016, Sanders is the first choice of 43 percent, Clinton of 31 percent.

Clinton leads with a small group of self-described conservatives among likely Democratic caucus-goers (44 percent to Sanders’s 5 percent); Sanders has a 5-point lead among liberals.

Support for other Democratic presidential contenders - Martin O’Malley, Jim Webb and Lincoln Chafee - remains in the low single digits, the poll showed. Asked to identify their second choice for president, respondents divided their preferences essentially evenly among Biden, Clinton and Sanders.

Nearly all Sanders supporters – 96 percent – said they are motivated mostly by support for him and his ideas rather than by opposition to Clinton. While Clinton posts a slightly higher overall favorable rating than Sanders, 77 percent compared with 73 percent, Sanders counts a considerably higher share who rate him as "very favorable," the most positive of the favorability rankings, at 39 percent compared with Clinton’s 27 percent.

"For the last six months, there hasn’t been another contender, but recently Joe Biden and, most importantly, Bernie Sanders has shaken things up," said Bryce Rodgers, 28, a software developer from Iowa City, who still counts Clinton as his first choice but says Sanders may yet steal him away.

"People talk about how they’re more excited about Bernie Sanders," said Rodgers. He's weighing that versus the question of electability. "It bothers me that she’s a little bit more entrenched in the status quo where Bernie has zero problem upsetting the status quo. But on the flip side I think that also could be an advantage" for Clinton in terms of money and organization.

The poll included some good news for Clinton. Her party base still sees her as a formidable nominee. Two-thirds of Democrats surveyed said they are "mostly confident" she can win the White House, compared to one-fourth who described themselves as "mostly nervous" she would lose the general election if nominated.

And the poll results tend to corroborate Clinton's contention that voters are uninterested in the e-mail controversy that has produced months of punishing headlines about her use of a private communications system when she was secretary of state. Most likely Democratic caucus-goers – 61 percent – said the controversy over Clinton’s use of a personal e-mail server is unimportant to them.

The survey comes at a time when Clinton’s team is growing concerned about both Sanders and Biden and is moving to lock down support in Iowa. Two prominent Iowa Democrats, former U.S. Senator Tom Harkin and U.S. Agriculture Secretary and former Governor Tom Vilsack, endorsed Clinton this month.

One poll respondent, Sean Bagniewski, who hosted a party for Clinton in his Des Moines backyard in July, said too much is being read into the polling trends and that Clinton remains solidly in the lead and the candidate he is sticking with. "I’m not personally concerned about it," he said.

He said he doesn’t believe Biden will ultimately run – and that the spike in Sanders’ popularity is predicated on most Democrats’ belief that he will not be the nominee but for now is a positive force in terms of nudging Clinton to the left on economic policy and toughening her up for the general election campaign. "When she came to my house, we had 200 people there, she was there for two-and-a-half hours, and she stayed until she personally met everyone there. If that’s the campaign she’s going to do, which it seems like she is, then she’s going to win Iowa."

Material from Bloomberg News was used in this story.

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/bernie-sanders-hillary-iowa-register/2015/08/29/id/672610/#ixzz3kQoEAM7w

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #360 on: September 07, 2015, 10:33:20 AM »
Bernie Sanders Leads Hillary Clinton by 9 in New Hampshire, Gains in Iowa: Poll
by MARK MURRAY

 Bernie Sanders Overtakes Hillary Clinton by 9 Points in New Hampshire 3:12
Bernie Sanders has jumped out to a nine-point lead over front-runner Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire, and he's gained ground on her among Iowa voters in the Democratic presidential race, according to a pair of brand-new NBC News/Marist polls.

In New Hampshire, the Vermont senator gets the support of 41 percent of Democratic voters, Clinton gets 32 percent and Vice President Joe Biden gets 16 percent. No other Democratic candidate receives more than 1 percent.

Back in July's NBC/Marist poll, Clinton was ahead of Sanders in the Granite State by 10 points, 42 percent to 32 percent, with Biden at 12 percent.

Without Biden in the race, Sanders' lead over Clinton in the current survey increases to 11 points, 49 percent to 38 percent.

In Iowa, Clinton maintains her previous advantage over Sanders — but her lead has declined from 24 points in July (49 percent to 25 percent) to 11 points (38 percent to 27 percent); Biden sits at 20 percent. View the full New Hampshire poll here.



Trump ahead in both Iowa and New Hampshire

Meanwhile, in the Republican presidential race, Donald Trump now holds a seven-point lead in Iowa and a 16-point one in New Hampshire.

In the Hawkeye State, Trump gets the support from 29 percent of potential GOP caucus-goers, while Ben Carson receives 22 percent. There's a steep drop off after that: Jeb Bush gets 6 percent; Carly Fiorina, Rand Paul and Scott Walker get 5 percent; and Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Bobby Jindal are at 4 percent.

In July, Walker was ahead of the Iowa Republican field at 19 percent, Trump was second at 17 percent and Bush was third at 12 percent.

In the Granite State, Trump is at 28 percent — followed by John Kasich at 12 percent, Carson at 11 percent, Bush at 8 percent and Fiorina at 6 percent; Walker is down to 4 percent.

Back in July, the top three in New Hampshire were Trump (21 percent), Bush (14 percent) and Walker (12 percent). View the full Iowa poll here.



Biden is more popular than Clinton — among Democrats and all voters

Amid speculation that Biden might enter the 2016 presidential race, the NBC/Marist polls found that the vice president is more popular than Clinton — among both Democrats and the general electorate.

And they show that he matches up better in general-election contests than Clinton does.

In Iowa, she holds a 67 percent/27 percent favorable/unfavorable score among Democrats, and just a 32 percent/61 percent score among all registered voters.

By comparison, Biden's numbers among Democrats are 74 percent/17 percent, and among registered voters they sit at 42 percent/44 percent.

In New Hampshire, Clinton holds a 69 percent/27 percent favorable/unfavorable score among Democrats, and 36 percent/60 percent among all registered voters.

In contrast, Biden's numbers among Granite State Democrats are 76 percent/17 percent, and among registered voters they are 46 percent/43 percent.

And in hypothetical general-election contests, the NBC/Marist polls found that Jeb Bush and Donald Trump both beat Clinton in Iowa:

Bush 50 percent, Clinton 39 percent
Trump 48 percent, Clinton 43 percent.
But Biden performs better:

Bush 46 percent, Biden 44 percent
Biden 49 percent, Trump 45 percent
In New Hampshire, the general-election numbers are:

Bush 48 percent, Clinton 43 percent
Clinton 46 percent, Trump 45 percent
Bush 46 percent, Biden 45 percent
Biden 50 percent, Trump 41 percent.

The NBC/Marist poll of Iowa was conducted Aug. 26-Sept. 2 of 998 registered voters (margin of error +/- 3.1 percentage points), 390 potential GOP caucus-goers (+/- 5.0) and 345 potential Democratic caucus-goers (+/- 5.3).

The NBC/Marist poll of New Hampshire was conducted Aug. 26-Sept. 2 of 966 registered voters (+/- 3.2%), 413 potential GOP primary voters (+/- 4.8) and 356 potential Democratic primary voters (+/- 5.2).

http://www.nbcnews.com/meet-the-press/bernie-sanders-leads-hillary-clinton-9-n-h-gains-iowa-n422111

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #361 on: September 08, 2015, 02:50:21 PM »
Monmouth Poll: Biden Inches Ahead of Sanders, Clinton Slips

Image: Monmouth Poll: Biden Inches Ahead of Sanders, Clinton Slips  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Charlie Leight/Getty Images; Alex Wong Getty Images) 
Tuesday, 08 Sep 2015

Joe Biden is up and Hillary Clinton is down in a new Monmouth University national poll of Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters.

Support for the vice president is building as speculation grows about his potential entry into the 2016 presidential race, with 22 percent saying they'd back him. That's ahead of Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who was picked by 20 percent. The difference is within the poll's plus or minus 5.3 percentage point margin of error.

Clinton, who continues to confront questions about her use of a private e-mail server while secretary of state in the Obama administration, has the support of 42 percent, down from 52 percent a month ago. Biden's number is 10 percentage points higher than a month ago, while Sanders has seen a 4-point increase during that time.

“For a guy who is not running for president, Biden sure is making headway against the frontrunner,” Patrick Murray, director of the West Long Branch, N.J.-based Monmouth University Polling Institute, said in a statement. “There also seems to be an opening with the more liberal Sanders voters, if Biden plays his cards right.”

Slim majorities of Clinton and Sanders voters say they would be at least somewhat likely to consider switching their support to Biden if he jumps into the race. The vice president isn't expected to make a decision until at least the end of September.

Biden’s favorable rating among Democrats and those leaning that way has moved a few percentage points higher and now stands at 71 percent, up from 67 percent a month ago.

As her nomination support has dropped, Clinton continues to be viewed favorably by the vast majority of Democrats, with her favorability rating unchanged from a month earlier, at 71 percent. For Sanders, his rating stands at 41 percent, with 14 percent viewing him unfavorably and 45 percent still having no opinion of him.

The telephone poll was conducted Aug. 31 to Sept. 2 with 1,009 U.S. adults. This release is based on a voter sample of 339 registered voters who identify themselves as Democrats or lean toward the Democratic Party.

One prominent conservative seemed to be egging Biden on as he contemplates entering the race. Fox Chairman Rupert Murdoch tweeted on Monday that it's “very likely” the vice president would win the nomination and that he'd “be hard to beat” in 2016.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/biden-ahead-sanders-poll/2015/09/08/id/678553/#ixzz3lBbhTVh8

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #362 on: September 09, 2015, 12:39:15 PM »
First in Fox News First: Hillary finds new low on favorability
By  Chris Stirewalt
Published September 09, 2015
FoxNews.com

What’s behind the pitching and ditching in Hillary Clinton’s struggling frontrunner campaign? She wasn’t sorry that she used a secret server on Monday, but – blam-o! –on Tuesday, she was.

Or at least she’s sorry that you don’t understand why it was perfectly right.

Her campaign is touting its reboot and they’ve even got the former secretary of state doing the “Nae Nae” as part of a “humor and heart” offensive. But, like her GOP counterpart, the giggles don’t exactly come rolling out.

The Nae Nae moves and the apology about-face are easily explained with a new poll of the six key swing states that shows Clinton stuck in her summer doldrums.

The poll, which will be released later today, was conducted for the pro-GOP group American Crossroads by pollsters Vox Populi last week in in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, Ohio, and Virginia.

Clinton’s deficit to a generic Republican nominee remained basically unchanged at 13 points, but the story remains her ongoing erosion on trust and overall favorability.

Clinton’s net favorability reached yet another new low, ticking down to negative 25 points. That’s four points worse than last month and 10 points worse than when the monthly poll began in July.

On the question of trust, it was more of the same from last month. She was viewed as to some degree untrustworthy by 58 percent of respondents at least to some degree trustworthy by 37 percent. Just 16 percent said they trust Clinton “completely” while 46 percent expressed “complete” distrust.

The telephone survey included 1,447 registered voters. You can get the full results of the poll here.

. . .

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/09/09/first-in-fox-news-first-hillary-finds-new-low-on-favorability/

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #363 on: September 10, 2015, 10:33:08 AM »
Sanders 41 To Clinton 40 In Iowa Democratic Caucus, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds; Dems Say Sanders Is More Honest And Caring
September 10, 2015

In a come-from-behind rally, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is the choice of 41 percent of Iowa likely Democratic Caucus participants, with 40 percent picking former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and 12 percent backing Vice President Joseph Biden, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.

This compares to results of a July 2 survey by the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe- ack) University showing Clinton at 52 percent, with 33 percent for Sanders and 7 percent for Biden.

Today, former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley gets 3 percent of Iowa likely Democratic Caucus participants, with 3 percent undecided.

There is a wide gender gap among Democrats today as Sanders leads Clinton 49 - 28 percent among men, with 16 percent for Biden, while Clinton leads Sanders 49 - 35 percent among women, with 9 percent for Biden.

Sanders and Biden have a higher net favorability rating than Clinton and higher ratings for honesty and empathy. Clinton has the best scores for leadership and temperament to handle an international crisis.

"Sen. Bernie Sanders has become the Eugene McCarthy of 2016," said Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll. "He is the candidate of the Democratic left, against his own party's bosses and their prized presidential candidate, Secretary Hillary Clinton.

"Sanders has seized the momentum by offering a message more in line with disproportionately liberal primary and caucus voters."

"But unlike the late Sen. McCarthy, who came on strong just before the 1968 primaries, Sen. Sanders has seized the momentum, five months before voting begins in Iowa. History will eventually tell us whether he has made such a large move too soon," Brown added.

"Although Vice President Joseph Biden received only 12 percent of the vote in this poll of likely Democratic Caucus-goers, he still may be a winner in the zero-sum game of presidential primary politics because it further increases questions about Clinton's electability."

Clinton has a 76 - 20 percent favorability rating among likely Democratic Caucus participants, as these voters say 64 - 30 percent that she is honest and trustworthy, and 78 - 18 percent that she cares about their needs and problems. She has strong leadership qualities, voters say 92 - 7 percent, and the right temperament and personality to handle an international crisis, voters say 89 - 9 percent.

Sanders gets a 78 - 6 percent favorability rating and likely Democratic Caucus-goers say 86 - 4 percent that he is honest and trustworthy, and 85 - 5 percent that he cares about their needs and problems. Voters say 76 - 9 percent that he has strong leadership qualities and 65 - 15 percent that he has the right temperament and personality to handle an international crisis.

Iowa likely Democratic Caucus participants give Biden a 79 - 9 percent favorability rating. He is honest and trustworthy, voters say 91 - 5 percent, and cares about their needs and problems, voters say 84 - 11 percent. He has strong leadership qualities, voters say 81 - 14 percent and the right temperament and personality for an international crisis, voters say 81 - 13 percent.

Iowa Democrats support the nuclear pact with Iran 66 - 19 percent and say 68 - 17 percent that the agreement will make the world safer.

From August 27 - September 8, Quinnipiac University surveyed 832 likely Iowa Democratic Caucus participants with a margin of error of +/- 3.4 percentage points. Live interviewers call land lines and cell phones.

The Quinnipiac University Poll, directed by Douglas Schwartz, Ph.D., conducts public opinion surveys in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Florida, Ohio, Virginia, Iowa, Colorado and the nation as a public service and for research.

http://www.quinnipiac.edu/news-and-events/quinnipiac-university-poll/iowa/release-detail?ReleaseID=2277

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #364 on: September 10, 2015, 11:42:08 AM »
Would be nice to see Biden run due the fact that he is loved and truasted by many...BUT...still no groundswell of support there by the public....maybe if Hillary gets caught in bed naked with a horse.....then we'll see

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #365 on: September 10, 2015, 11:43:18 AM »
Actually Biden is probably getting ready to run.  I heard today that he is waiting for Hillary's numbers to drop to a certain level before jumping in. 

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #366 on: September 10, 2015, 12:04:22 PM »
Actually Biden is probably getting ready to run.  I heard today that he is waiting for Hillary's numbers to drop to a certain level before jumping in. 

A shot at Bernie?

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #367 on: September 10, 2015, 12:29:33 PM »
A shot at Bernie?

Absolutely.  I don't think Democrats are confident in Bernie as the nominee.  They have been floating Biden, Kerry, Warren, and even Gore.  Smacks of desperation. 

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #368 on: September 10, 2015, 03:49:29 PM »
Absolutely.  I don't think Democrats are confident in Bernie as the nominee.  They have been floating Biden, Kerry, Warren, and even Gore.  Smacks of desperation. 

So not necessarily against Hilary, but as a hedge against Bernie beating Hilary, you think?

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #369 on: September 10, 2015, 03:56:04 PM »
Looks like the establishment and their media are teaming up against Sanders.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #370 on: September 10, 2015, 04:34:06 PM »
So not necessarily against Hilary, but as a hedge against Bernie beating Hilary, you think?

Both.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #371 on: September 10, 2015, 05:49:04 PM »
Six debates coming for Democrats.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #372 on: September 10, 2015, 05:56:04 PM »
Bernie now edging Hil in Iowa.  But they make the story about Hilary rather than Bernie.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #373 on: September 14, 2015, 10:25:45 AM »
Anyone have info on the upcoming debates?  Post it here.

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Re: Presidential Candidates 2016: 10 Democrats Who Might Be the Next Nominee
« Reply #374 on: September 14, 2015, 12:56:04 PM »
Anyone have info on the upcoming debates?  Post it here.

wed night.  repub CNN debate from reagan library