The Campaign Spot

Quinnipiac: Scott Walker Enjoys Big Lead Among GOP Iowa Caucusgoers

For now, it’s Scott Walker’s world, and the rest of the GOP presidential field is just living in it. This morning Quinnipiac offers a new poll revealing . . . 

An early look at likely Iowa Republican Caucus participants shows a strong conservative tilt as Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker leads the pack with 25 percent, twice as high as his nearest rival, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.

Voters who identify as “very conservative” make up 45 percent of the caucus participants surveyed by the independent Quinnipiac University. Tea Party supporters make up 32 percent of likely caucus-goers and Walker gets 33 percent of that Tea Party vote.

There is a horse race for second place, with 13 percent for U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, 11 percent each for physician Ben Carson and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and 10 percent for former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. No other candidate is above 5 percent and 9 percent are undecided.

Walker gets 13 percent when caucus participants name their second choice, with 11 percent for Bush and 9 percent each for former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Paul.

In a combination of first and second choices, Walker tops the list with 37 percent, with 21 percent for Paul, 20 percent for Bush, 19 percent for Carson and 18 percent for Huckabee. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is taking the Republican political world by storm,” said Quinnipiac University Poll Assistant Director Peter A. Brown. “He’s gone from being unknown outside Wisconsin to the hot candidate, poised to become the front-runner for the GOP presidential nomination. Front-runner status would make it easier for Gov. Walker to raise money and recruit top talent for his staff, but it also puts a target on his back.

“Perhaps most impressive about Walker’s numbers is that 57 percent view him favorably to only 7 percent who view him unfavorably — a heck of a first impression.”

This explains, in large part, the obsessively hostile tone of the national media’s early coverage of Walker — he is, at this moment, not just the front-runner but one of the biggest faces of the Republican party, and one that is near-certain to represent the party’s future, no matter what happens in 2016. What’s more, he’s already been the subject of three nasty campaigns that got a lot of coverage beyond Wisconsin.

Wisconsin Democrats, public-sector unions, Ed Schultz and some of the MSNBC gang, and a bunch of national Democrats set out to make Walker radioactive in the 2012 recall and in 2014, and failed twice. A lot of their media allies think they have to make up for lost time.

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