CrusaderFrank
Diamond Member
- May 20, 2009
- 148,629
- 71,938
- 2,330
Rasmussen says this:
The current polling shows that 19% of Democratic voters are undecided or prefer some other candidate. Only 7% of Republicans fall into this category. That suggests Sestak has some work remaining to unify his party following the primary battle.
...Now how does Rasmussen figure that is to Sestak's disadvantage? If there are almost 3 times as many Democrats undecided as Republicans, isn't the logical conclusion that Sestak stands to gain more when the undecideds become decideds?
oh, btw, Rasmussen makes you pay to see the crosstabs on his polls, which makes it difficult to figure out how many of who and what his polls are talking to.
It means modern Democrats (aka: Neo-National Socialists) have fooled their last Moderate.
Could you say that again, please, without Sinatra's balls in your mouth...it was a little garbled.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyPJBJCU28I]YouTube - Terminator (original)[/ame]