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Contact: Rene Abadie
Date: 10/27/04
 
The SLU Poll: Louisiana Voters and the 2004 Presidential and U. S. Senatorial Election

SOUTHEASTERN POLL: BUSH HOLDS COMMANDING LEAD IN LOUISIANA
     HAMMOND – Heading into the final week of the campaign, a Southeastern Louisiana University public opinion poll of Louisiana registered voters shows President George W. Bush holding a commanding lead over his major contender Senator John Kerry.
     Data gathered from interviews conducted Oct. 17-22 with 637 randomly selected registered voters statewide indicate that 57.8 percent of voters would select the President compared to 31.6 picking Kerry, and .5 percent choosing Ralph Nader. “Other” candidates were chosen by 2.5 percent, and 7.7 percent of the sample did not know or refused to tell who they would vote for.
     The information was collected by faculty and students in Southeastern’s Florida Parishes Social Sciences Research Center and has a sampling error of plus or minus 4 percent. The poll was conducted by Kurt Corbello, associate professor of political science.
     “As we expected, voting choices in this election are polarized by race,” Corbello said. “White voters overwhelmingly support Bush over Kerry by 77 to 16 percent, while black voters strongly support Kerry over Bush by 66 percent to 13 percent.”
     Corbello said that while Kerry is favored by two-thirds (67%) of voters who identified themselves as Democrats, he loses almost 24 percent of those Democrats to Bush. “More importantly, while Bush receives monolithic support among Republicans (94.7%), he also receives almost 64 percent of the vote from independents,” Corbello said.
     He added that the poll shows Bush dominating Kerry in all regions of the state, especially in north and central Louisiana, and does not show any signs of a gender gap.
     Corbello’s study attempted to ascertain voters’ feelings about negative statements made about each candidate. 
     “We wanted to see who has done a better job of making their negative depiction of the other candidate stick in the minds of Louisiana voters,” Corbello said. “In Louisiana, in general the Bush campaign has clearly been the most convincing of the two. Black voters, however, tended to agree with negative assessments of Bush and to disagree with negative assessments of Kerry.”
     In the race for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by John Breaux, candidate David Vitter is favored by 42.9 percent of those surveyed, followed by Chris John (18.1%), John Kennedy (10.4%) and Arthur Morrell (1.1%). In possible trial runoffs, both John and Kennedy lag behind Vitter.
     “However,” Corbello stated, “recent U.S. Senate runoff elections in Louisiana show that Vitter cannot rest complacently on a primary election lead.”
     The survey also questioned voters about the U.S.-led war in Iraq. Slightly more than 53 percent approved of the war with 35.4 percent expressing disapproval and 11.3 percent expressing no opinion or refusing to answer. Corbello noted that the results were polarized by race with more than two-thirds of white voters (69.6%) expressing approval compared to 15.5 percent of black voters.
     Voters were asked to prioritize a set of domestic issues and whether whoever is president should make that issue a high, medium or low priority. Overwhelmingly, 80.2 percent of voters in Louisiana saw “protecting Social Security” as a high priority. The idea of “developing a national health care system” was rated a high priority by 55.1 percent followed by “creating more high-paying jobs” (54%).
     The poll was conducted by approximately 140 Southeastern political science students specially trained for the project and working under professional supervision.