Exit Polls: West Virginia

Gunny

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Dec 27, 2004
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The Republic of Texas
Clinton headed for big win but will it be a record?
Posted: 09:11 PM ET

From CNN Political Research Director Robert Yoon

(CNN) — If Hillary Clinton ends up winning more than 70.05 percent of the vote in West Virginia tonight, she will have her best showing of the campaign to date.

Clinton's biggest victory so far this campaign came in the Arkansas primary on Super Tuesday, February 5, when she beat Barack Obama 70.05 percent to 26.25 percent — the Illinois senator's poorest showing to date.

The Arkansas primary marked the only contest so far where Clinton reached the 70 percent vote threshold. So far Obama has reached or exceeded 70 percent in five contests: the DC primary (75 percent), and the caucuses in Alaska (75 percent), Hawaii (76 percent), Idaho (79 percent), and Kansas (74 percent).

Clinton's second best showing was in the Rhode Island primary on March 4, when she captured 58 percent of the vote.

Exit Polls: Clinton gains edge among independents

From CNN's Joe Van Kanel

(CNN) — Exit polling shows Hillary Clinton winning a slim majority of independent voters in West Virginia’s Democratic primary. Eighteen percent of the voters in today's Democratic contest identified themselves as independents; they went for Clinton over Obama, 53 percent to 40 percent.
Exit polls: West Virginia voters want Democratic race to continue
Posted: 08:17 PM ET

From CNN's Joe Van Kanel

(CNN) — Despite a week of intense media speculation about whether Hillary Clinton will drop out of the race for the Democratic nomination, early exit polling in today's West Virginia Democratic primary shows 70 percent of the voters would prefer the campaign to continue. Only 25 percent say the campaign should end as soon as possible.

Schneider: A clear rift in the party exists
Posted: 07:39 PM ET

From CNN Senior Political Analyst Bill Schneider


(CNN) — West Virginia exit polls appear to show the prolonged Democratic presidential race has produced a clear rift in the party, at least for now.

We asked supporters of both candidates whether they would be satisfied if the other candidate won the nomination. A large majority of both candidates' supporters said they would not: only 38 percent of Obama supporters said they would be satisfied if Clinton won, and only 25 percent of Clinton backers said they'd be satisfied if Barack Obama was the nominee.

Translation: There's a lot of reconciliation to be taken care of.

more .... http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/
 

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