Polls peg Madigan above Quinn and Daley
POLITICS | Rich Miller
You probably won’t be
surprised to learn that a poll taken last Wednesday, Jan. 30 of 1,255
likely Illinois Democratic primary voters shows Attorney General Lisa
Madigan leading Gov. Pat Quinn by a very large margin.
Madigan
also leads Quinn and former White House chief of staff Bill Daley in a
threeway contest, according to the poll, but Quinn leads Daley in a
one-on-one race. And a large plurality of Democrats disapprove of the
governor’s job performance. The We Ask America poll has a margin of
error of +/- 3 percent. About 18 percent of the results came from
non-landline users.
In
the poll, Madigan leads Quinn by 25 points, 50.5 to 25.7. Among women,
who almost always comprise a majority of Democratic primary votes,
Madigan’s lead is 53-22, while she leads among men 46-30.
Attorney
General Madigan’s lead over the governor in Chicago is 46-30 and it’s
51-28 in suburban Cook. Madigan is ahead 53-23 in the suburban collar
counties and by a massive 53-21 in downstate.
Madigan
has not yet decided whether she is going to run for governor. People
close to her are divided over what they think she’ll do. She reportedly
plans to take her time with her decision.
A
Public Policy Polling survey taken in November had Madigan leading
Quinn 64-20. But that poll was of just 319 ‘usual’ Democratic primary
voters with a margin of error of +/- 5.5 percent. Still, PPP does
excellent work, so if you average the two polls you get a 57-23 lead for
Madigan. If Madigan’s decision is heavily weighted toward whether she
can win the primary, she’ll run.
Quinn
has a better shot against Daley, a white, Irish Democratic Chicago man
who may not bring much more to the table than Dan Hynes did in the 2010
primary. According to the We Ask America poll, Quinn leads Daley by five
points, 38-33. November’s PPP survey had Daley leading Quinn 37-34, so average those two results and you get an essential tie at 36 for Quinn and 35 for Daley.
According
to last week’s We Ask America poll, Quinn leads Daley in the city
45-30, but Daley leads in suburban Cook 40-36. Quinn has a narrow
half-point lead in the collars and leads by less than two points
downstate. The Daley name ain’t what it used to be.
Could
Daley be a spoiler who helps Quinn in a three-way race? Not according
to the We Ask America poll. According to the poll, Madigan leads the
multiple candidate contest with 37 percent to Quinn’s 20 percent to
Daley’s 15. Public Policy Polling did not test a three-way race last
November.
Madigan’s lead among women in a three-way contest is pretty big. She gets 38 percent to Quinn’s 17 percent to Daley’s 13 percent. Among men, her lead is a bit smaller at 34 percent to Quinn’s 24 percent to Daley’s 18 percent.
Madigan
leads Quinn and Daley in Chicago 35-22-17. Her lead in suburban Cook is
35-18-18. She leads 36-17-16 in the collars and is ahead by a very big
40-19-11 downstate.
Public
Policy Polling had Quinn’s job approval rating among Democrats at 40
percent, with a 43 percent disapproval. Last week’s We Ask America poll
had Quinn’s approval among fellow party members at 37 percent, with a 42
percent disapproval. Despite the headto-head matchups, women give him a
slightly lower disapproval rating than men, 41 percent of women
disapprove, compared to 46 percent of men. But just 36 percent of
Democratic women and 37 percent of Democratic men approve of the way
Quinn is handling his job.
Quinn
won the 2010 primary and general elections despite low approval
ratings. So, he’s been here before. What he didn’t have to do back then,
however, was take on one of the most popular politicians in Illinois.
PPP’s November poll pegged Lisa Madigan’s favorable rating at 68 percent
among Democrats, while just 16 percent had an unfavorable view.
If
Lisa Madigan runs, she likely wins the primary. Daley is another story.
Like 2010, a Daley-Quinn race will be a hard-fought and bloody battle
that could end up being pretty close. If Quinn has to get a single
primary opponent, Daley would be the one he’d want.
Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.