Leaked Poll Shows Corbett in Trouble

POS poll May 2013 by region

An internal poll conducted by a Republican firm and first reported by the Philadelphia City Paper shows Tom Corbett in a deep hole.

It’s not yet clear who leaked the poll to the CP.

By a 37 point margin, voters say the Governor does not deserve to be re-elected, 65% to 28%. He loses Democrats on that question 81% to 15%, loses independents 60% to 25%, and only wins Republicans by 3 points, 47% to 44%.

53% to 40%, voters disapprove the way Corbett is handling his job as Governor.

And he loses in a hypothetical matchup with Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz by 12 points, 46% to 34%.

The pollster also broke down the state by media market, and found the Governor lagging in Pittsburgh. The complete regional breakdown is in the image above.

The pollster surveyed 600 registered voters from April 30 to May 2 via live interviews on landlines and cell phones. POS also oversampled the four southeast Pa. suburban counties. The margin of error is plus or minus 4%.

The full memo is here.

Its findings reiterate those by independent pollsters that the Governor’s re-election odds are long.

Luckily for Corbett, this isn’t a nightmare scenario where one of his inner circle leaked a poll conducted by his campaign. In fact, it appears the survey was commissioned by an outside group with the specific intent of influencing the Governor’s policy.

Most of the poll focuses not on Corbett’s statewide appeal, but on the Philadelphia School District, its current funding gap, and its teachers’ union.

A few hours after it published the poll, the City Paper determined that it was commissioned by an education reform group. PennCAN supports the specific policy outcomes recommended in the polling memo, as well as other conservative reforms including school vouchers.

The polling memo’s key argument: Corbett can boost his appeal in Philly, southeast Pa. and statewide by aggressively using the current crises to challenge the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers.

“With Governor Corbett’s weak job approval, re-elect and ballot support numbers, the current Philadelphia schools crisis presents an opportunity for the Governor to wedge the electorate on an issue that is favorable to him,” the memo concludes.

“Staging this battle presents Corbett with an opportunity to coalesce his base, focus on a key emerging issue in the state, and campaign against an ‘enemy’ that’s going to aggressively oppose him in ‘14 in any case.”

With this survey as with any internal poll the results should be taken with a grain of salt. Public Opinion Strategies is a reputable Republican polling firm, but at the end of the day the organization that pays for a poll gets the final say on its composition (the wording of questions, the emphasis of the polling memo, etc).

This polling memo was meant to convince Corbett that following PennCAN’s policy proposals would boost his odds of re-election.

But it’s not clear that the memo made it to Corbett’s desk, nor that its results have influenced his policies. Shortly after the CP story broke, Corbett’s office issued a statement clarifying his position on the Philadelphia schools funding crisis.

“As governor, I am committed to finding a long-term solution for the Philadelphia School District that is focused on students and is fiscally responsible for taxpayers,” Corbett said in the statement. “These solutions include a combination of student – centered contributions from the state, the city, the school district and the union – with an expectation that we will not be back at the drawing board again next year with another fiscal crisis.”

Coincidentally or not, his solution is the one the poll found to have the greatest statewide support.

The Philadelphia school district, in order to eliminate a $304 million deficit, has asked for aid from multiple levels of government, including $120 million from the state.

Bryan Magee contributed to this report.

5 Responses

  1. Overall the poll is probably right on but it seems strange Corbett’s best area is the Wilkes-Barre market. BTW, I guess the 5 commercial tv stations in Erie and the 280,000 resident of Erie county are no longer in PA?

  2. I cannot believe the Republicans are running a poll this early. They should spend their money to advertise the strengths of the Governor. Citing the positives versus the last democratic governor is important for all to see on a regular basis. As a registered Republican who votes in ALL elections, I have NEVER been polled so who did they poll? What was the sample? I would not put much credence to this poll.

  3. Jim Cawley presented at PLC last Tuesday and it appeared to be a roll out of Cawley for Governor.

    Jim Cawley is not fatally tainted by Sandusky 3 year Grand Jury investigation. The three year delay and failure to allocate enough investigative resources has not been satisfactorily explained.

    This poll is consistent with previous Quinnipiac Poll. What is significant is that it is a Republican Poll.

  4. Newhouse is an Asher tool. This is the beginning of a play to replace Corbett with another Asher controlled puppet who might have a chance to win.

  5. How on earth is a poll conducted in April news in late June?

    What’s next? A story on an unreleased poll from October showing Romney poised to win Pennsylvania?

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