If the group is broken into the main categories of the party, the results look as follows. Of course, most of the candidates and the categories overlap.
The Republican race not only doesn’t have a frontrunner, but
the main faction, the Tea Party, has only 37 percent of the rank and file
Republican vote. No Tea Party identified candidate has more than 10 percent and
most of the Tea Party candidates also claim establishment and/or evangelical
credentials. Neither the usually dominant establishment (nominating Dole, Bush,
McCain, Romney since 1996) nor the party’s potent Tea Party faction have a commanding
position.
The latest Quinnipiac Colorado poll shows Clinton beats or
ties the four candidates tested, except Ron Paul who beats Clinton by five
points and leads the field.
Paul’s strength comes from being the only Republican who wins voters under 30 years old against Clinton and holds an 11-point lead among independent voters.
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