Total Members Voted: 60
When was the last time someone of K's ilk won a national election as an R?
If you really like israel you like cruz.
With you and Shia here on ddf cruz will just ride straight to the white house
He will have at least two votes.
Based on the poll on this thread Sanders gets at least 4 votes and is in a dead heat with Clinton.
I was considering k but he's Jesus talk really upset me.
Definitely was moronic, that's for sure. Don't think it was nefarious, just clueless.
He either didn't know better or he knew and said it anyway. Both options are disqualifying.
I still think he'd be by far the most likely to beat Hillary in November though.
Another Hook story on the poll notes that “both parties’ presidential front-runners are growing increasingly unpopular . . . with Hillary Clinton showing an especially steep decline over the past month”:QuoteAmong voters in both parties, 56% hold a negative view of Mrs. Clinton and 32% hold a positive view. That 24-point gap is almost twice as wide as in a Journal/NBC poll last month, when 51% viewed her negatively and 38% positively, a 13-point gap.GOP front-runner Donald Trump continues to be the candidate in either party viewed most negatively, with 65% of registered voters viewing him unfavorably and 24% favorably, a 41-point difference. Unlike with Mrs. Clinton, those numbers haven’t changed much over the past month.Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, Mr. Trump’s nearest competitor for the Republican nomination, has an image problem of his own. Nearly half of voters [49%] see him in a negative light, while 26% view him positively. . . .The candidate with the least baggage is Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who also is the least well known. Some 31% of registered voters view him favorably and 19% view him unfavorably; 31% are neutral, and 19% don’t know him or aren’t sure. “The candidate with the least baggage” is an apt description of Kasich. One can’t really call him popular based on these numbers; and his favorables are no doubt inflated somewhat by the liberal media notion that he is the “reasonable” Republican—a status he would lose immediately were he to become the nominee.
Among voters in both parties, 56% hold a negative view of Mrs. Clinton and 32% hold a positive view. That 24-point gap is almost twice as wide as in a Journal/NBC poll last month, when 51% viewed her negatively and 38% positively, a 13-point gap.GOP front-runner Donald Trump continues to be the candidate in either party viewed most negatively, with 65% of registered voters viewing him unfavorably and 24% favorably, a 41-point difference. Unlike with Mrs. Clinton, those numbers haven’t changed much over the past month.Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, Mr. Trump’s nearest competitor for the Republican nomination, has an image problem of his own. Nearly half of voters [49%] see him in a negative light, while 26% view him positively. . . .The candidate with the least baggage is Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who also is the least well known. Some 31% of registered voters view him favorably and 19% view him unfavorably; 31% are neutral, and 19% don’t know him or aren’t sure.
Did not vote.