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John Zogby (born 1948) is an American political pollster and first senior fellow at The Catholic University of America's Life Cycle Institute. He is the founder, president and CEO of Zogby International, a polling firm known for both phone polling and interactive, Internet-based polling. Full Article
We saw that was pretty risky. It’s risky now too. It’s clearly a contrast with Obama, who is not seen as having strong managerial or leadership skills, however what will always be missing is Romney is not the guy you’d like to see dancing ... Folks, when they elect a president, there’s a lot of heart an...
We saw that was pretty risky. It’s risky now too. It’s clearly a contrast with Obama, who is not seen as having strong managerial or leadership skills, however what will always be missing is Romney is not the guy you’d like to see dancing ... Folks, when they elect a president, there’s a lot of heart an...
This is a guy who rings bells and whistles ... Much more than Romney does. Romney is seen as cool, competent, managerial. But who’s the guy who kicks up dust? It’s going to be Gingrich and Paul, but mainly Gingrich.
As long as the conservative alternative is split, then there is no conservative alternative ... Romney’s numbers are solid and strong. However, they don’t match the combined numbers of the conservatives in the race. But at this point in time, there’s a second war going on. It’s not just Gingrich and Rom...
There is one fly in the ointment, and that's Ron Paul ... Ron Paul draws his support from cities and college campuses and young people — not only 18- to 29-year-olds, but those under-40 as well. So if there is a high turnout in South Carolina, Ron Paul could actually hurt Mitt Romney.
That's not a good number ... The right direction-wrong track question is a very important voting barometer, and generally, you should have a majority who feel that the country is headed in the right direction.
There is one fly in the ointment, and that's Ron Paul ... Ron Paul draws his support from cities and college campuses and young people — not only 18- to 29-year-olds, but those under-40 as well. So if there is a high turnout in South Carolina, Ron Paul could actually hurt Mitt Romney.
