A poll last week signaling an early near-tie in the 2012 Massachusetts U.S. Senate race found about as many registered voters hadn’t heard of Elizabeth Warren, by far the front-runner for the Democratic nomination, as would likely vote for her against Republican incumbent Scott Brown. A closer look at voters unfamiliar with Warren hints that she doesn’t have nearly as much upside with that group as their numbers might suggest. But an analysis of demographics and attitudes of those voters who are truly up for grabs indicates they could help ensure Warren stays competitive with Brown, if – and it’s a big if – she can turn them out to vote.
sue-kennedysays
and a fierce grassroots campaign. Until then we will just rely on videos like this: http://youtu.be/GtwZTRmAQpc
When those come out, we’ll have a cleared picture of how quickly the campaign while become more tangible (offices, volunteering opportunities, etc). Opening offices, dispatching volunteers, fleshing out policy positions, making the campaign real will probably help, too.
Mark L. Bail says
It’s nice to see the cross-tabs, but my God…
sue-kennedy says
and a fierce grassroots campaign. Until then we will just rely on videos like this: http://youtu.be/GtwZTRmAQpc
Mark L. Bail says
Springfield area, by chance?
sue-kennedy says
I’m not.
mski011 says
When those come out, we’ll have a cleared picture of how quickly the campaign while become more tangible (offices, volunteering opportunities, etc). Opening offices, dispatching volunteers, fleshing out policy positions, making the campaign real will probably help, too.