Sunday, October 2, 2011

RealClear Politics Drops Palin from 2012 GOP Candidate Polling

Real Clear Politics Drops Palin from the Polls

Realclearpolitics.com has had enough I guess.  Perhaps they've been accused of falsely promoting "false hope" of a Palin run.  Perhaps greater editorial forces don't want to create it.  I don't know.  But at some point this weekend Palin was dropped from the running totals on their 2012 GOP Nomination Chart 


Odd.  Scott Conroy who Erick Erickson badly misquoted in a September 23rd said it would be difficult but not impossible to get in the race.  Oddly, CBS news re-ran this article with the headline, "Palin Waiting Game Could Run Into October."


So at first I thought.  Ok.  RCP has decided to only carry ANNOUNCED candidates.  They were carrying Perry before he ran but have never - to my knowledge - shown Christy on any poll.  But on the same page as the Scott Conroy article is a single column summation that leads to this:


So Christie, who has also not announced and in fact has not been carried AT ALL on the 2012 GOP Nomination Chart (to my knowledge and experience) is not scrubbed but Palin is?


Huh?


This will thrill Erick Erickson no end!  I can see the headline of Morning Briefing, "MAJOR POLLING SOURCE AGREES PALIN SHOULD NOT RUN"  or something.  Since Erickson MISSED the fact RCP's headline admitted the decision could happen in October from THEIR reporting and this:
But Palin’s aides insist that they have constructed a plan by which they could have a fully functional -- if tiny, by contemporary standards -- operation ready within a couple of weeks.
And this
The next item on Palin’s official agenda is a paid speech at a business conference in South Korea during the second week of October -- an event that overlaps with a GOP debate scheduled for Oct. 11 in Hanover, N.H.
And this:
But in private conversations, aides to the former governor continue to suggest that there is still time for Palin to take advantage of her unique magnetism and ability to generate untold amounts of free media and small donations to run a volunteer-propelled, uber-grassroots campaign the likes of which modern American politics has never before seen.
And he referenced the Marist poll as a sign she is viable:
If she is still gauging the viability of a potential candidacy before making her ultimate decision, Palin might find grounds for encouragement in a McClatchy-Marist poll released earlier this week that showed her trailing President Obama by just five percentage points in a hypothetical general election matchup and beating him among independents.
So why drop her and not Christie from current poll results?


When I checked the running polls on Friday, I seem to recall Palin running at 9.5% on RCP.  Cain's strong movement in the FOX poll was still heavily diluted by averages from pre-debate polls but had moved even in RCP to kind of a middle tier with Gingrich, Palin, and Paul.  FOX of course shows the race essentially a 3-way race between Perry, Romney and Cain with Newt pressing hard to enter the fray.


As I've said before, Perry jumped from single digits to a 15 point lead (8th place to 1st) when he announced.  I have no doubt that Palin would jump from (effectively) 4th place to first if and when she announced.


Of course, RCP has the right to do anything they like.  They obviously were not carrying either Giuliani or Christie in the Nomination poll but were Palin until this weekend which was incongruous except for the fact Palin was still polling third in nearly every poll.


It might be a bit sobering to some Palin fans, but it certainly won't effect either her decision or interest in her should she announce by mid October or so.

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