A CNN/ORC poll
released on Monday finds Hillary Clinton is still dominating the
Republican field in the 2016 presidential race. Clinton leads each
hypothetical GOP candidate by a margin of at least 14 percentage points.
The telephone poll was conducted between April 16-19, 2015, generating responses from a representative sample of 1,018 adult Americans.
The survey found
that Clinton holds a commanding lead over each potential Republican
opponent. The closest match-up is against Florida Senator Marco Rubio.
In that race, Clinton leads 55-41 percent. She has a 56-39 advantage
over Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush. She leads both Kentucky Senator
Rand Paul, and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie by a 58-39
margin. Scott Walker, Mike Huckabee, Ted Cruz and Ben Carson are in even
more miserable shape, as each of them trail Hillary Clinton by over 20
percentage points.
The Republican field appears wide open, with no
candidate garnering better than 20 percent support. Bush leads the GOP
race with 17 percent, followed by Scott Walker at 12 percent, and Rand
Paul and Marco Rubio, both at 11 percent. On the Democratic side,
Hillary Clinton is dominating the field with 69 percent support. Her
nearest Democratic challenger, Vice President Joe Biden, is favored by
just 11 percent of potential Democratic primary voters.
Although Hillary Clinton has received a fair
amount of negative press coverage in the past couple of months, her
candidacy seems to be weathering the storm quite well. Republicans
hoping that they have carved into her lopsided lead may find Monday’s
poll numbers disheartening. For all their efforts, the GOP doesn’t seem
to be gaining any traction in slowing down the Clinton campaign
juggernaut.
The Republicans have been chomping at the bit for a
chance to win back the White House. However, this new poll suggests that
while American voters are ready for Hillary, the Republican candidates
certainly are not. Every one of the GOP candidates is getting
steamrolled by Clinton in the polls.
The
general election is still almost a year and a half away, so the polls
may tighten between now and then. But as of April 2015, there isn’t a
single Republican candidate who polls competitively against Hillary
Clinton. If that dynamic doesn’t change, Hillary Clinton will become
America’s first woman president. Not only that, but she would accomplish
the feat in convincing fashion, vanquishing her GOP opponent in a
historic landslide.
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