who will win the 2016 Democratic nomination? (user search)
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  who will win the 2016 Democratic nomination? (search mode)
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Poll
Question: who will win the 2016 Democratic nomination?
#1
Mark Warner
 
#2
Andrew Cuomo
 
#3
Cory Booker
 
#4
Hillary Clinton
 
#5
Al Gore
 
#6
Barack Obama
 
#7
Tim Kaine
 
#8
Russ Feingold
 
#9
Bernie Sanders
 
#10
Joe Biden
 
#11
Alexi Giannoulias
 
#12
Gavin Newsom
 
#13
Jon Tester
 
#14
Brian Schweitzer
 
#15
Martin O'Malley
 
#16
Bob Casey, Jr.
 
#17
Evan Bayh
 
#18
Claire McCaskill
 
#19
Dennis Kucinich
 
#20
Michelle Obama
 
#21
other/none
 
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Partisan results

Total Voters: 78

Author Topic: who will win the 2016 Democratic nomination?  (Read 15091 times)
LastVoter
seatown
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Posts: 4,322
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« on: December 04, 2011, 01:57:57 AM »

I hope to God it isn't that right-winger Cuomo.

they are all right wing, this is the Democratic party.
Sanders is a left-winger. Kucinich would probably be too in some alternate reality where he is not an elf.
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LastVoter
seatown
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,322
Thailand


« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2011, 10:39:52 PM »

If Elizabeth Warren beats Scott Brown on election night 2012, the 2016 buzz will begin the next morning.
Warren's a no-brainer to get the convention keynote.  I assume she'll hit it out of park and, given Obama's own path, the chatter will start then and there.

Cuomo and Warren will be the two the media initially focus on throughout the 2nd term (ala Romney and Huckabee) this past cycle, but I definitely see somebody like Schweitzer make some noise very early and quickly rising to the top tier.
Romney and Huckabee? You're leaving out someone the media focused on for a while, no?  But perhaps Christie is a better comparison than Palin.  I doubt they'll let Hillary say "no" less definitively or fewer times than they forced Christie to.  Speaking of him, Schweitzer has a similar plainspoken appeal, albeit Western instead of Jersey.  But he may not have the vacuum that almost sucked Christie into the race.  Also Biden seems to be interested and will be able to get himself chatted about.  

O'Malley and Warner are sort of intriguing, but I just don't think they have the pizzazz to make it all the way.
Like trying win at Antietam.

If Feingold runs he will immediately start off with a good chunk of solid support that will be sustained throughout, but I'm not sure if it goes much beyond that-- ala Ron Paul.
But Feingold would have a much higher ceiling than Paul who is anathema to a majority of his party.
Feingold would be a viable candidate if he changes his mind about recall election. He gets the solid support + progressive hero vote then(that overlaps with Warren).
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