Done by the same firm which
released the only previous independent and public poll on the race, which had
showed McAllister leading the field but with a dismal 27 percent and the only
Democrat in it Monroe Mayor Jamie Mayo
next at 21 percent, revealed the previously highest-placed challenger
Republican to McAllister, physician Ralph
Abraham, now topped the group at 22 percent. McAllister had slumped to 20
percent and Mayo was down just a point fewer than he had to 15 percent. Holloway
debuted with 9 percent of the vote, in fifth place, behind businessman Harris Brown at 11 percent, who
nearly doubled his previous total. Losing as much as McAllister was the
previously fourth-place holder, salesman Zach
Dasher, who fell to sixth place at 7 percent.
(There are some methodological quibbles with this poll and its predecessor, such as it fails to rotate answers throughout, meaning there’s a slight bias towards earlier-listed names and away from those nearer the end of the alphabet. But in terms of changes in candidate totals between polls that shouldn’t matter for analysis.)
(There are some methodological quibbles with this poll and its predecessor, such as it fails to rotate answers throughout, meaning there’s a slight bias towards earlier-listed names and away from those nearer the end of the alphabet. But in terms of changes in candidate totals between polls that shouldn’t matter for analysis.)
The pollster hypothesized that
Holloway was slicing off votes not from Abraham, Brown, or Dasher, all
conservative Republican challengers, but from McAllister in the southern part
of the district; only Holloway and former Grant Parish District Attorney Ed Tarpley, in seventh place dropping from
9 to 6 percent, do not come from the Monroe area of the district. He
also speculated that the relatively low proportion saying it would vote for
Mayo, who is black, in a district where over
32 percent of the registered voters are black non-Republicans, was a
reflection of quiescent campaign activity on his part that has some who might
otherwise support him instead stating McAllister as their choice.
It’s certainly possible that
Holloway has clipped a point or two from McAllister, being as the latter may
have served as a default name earlier in the campaign for uninformed
respondents and people in the Alexandria area certainly recognize the former’s
name. But McAllister probably has lost more points to all candidates become better
known, giving those less informed a reason not to have to give out the only
name they know. And the biggest beneficiaries probably have been the most
diligent campaigner, Abraham, and the candidate now cranking up the most
spending, Brown. As these polls were not part of a panel – the same respondents
for both – no one knows for sure.
Meaning there probably there is
something to the drop for Mayo in terms of his support, as well as others who
could be supporting him, going over to McAllister. Mayo’s core voters are more likely
to be less informed and to decide at the very end of the campaign
(disproportionately right around election day, when they receive literature
from intermediaries indicating the “ballot” they should vote), so for now they
go with the familiar name – made more so by McAllister’s penchant for being
contrary to his party on occasion, much to Democrats’ delight.
However, some of this may be strategic
as well among the more informed of presumed Mayo supporters. They may be
getting a sense that McAllister’s weakness, and especially the strength of
Abraham, makes their preferred runoff of Mayo and McAllister unlikely, where
they dream that McAllister’s scandal and double talk make him so anathema that
Mayo wins, but they can live with McAllister as the least “evil.” Meanwhile,
their last choice of Mayo versus any challenger, which he assuredly loses, has become
more likely, so they may be thinking of trying to foment their middle sceanrio,
supporting McAllister in the hopes of getting the least of the evils into a
runoff with a conservative challenger and that he can hang onto the seat.
Recall that to the political left
that Mayo’s presence on the ballot isn’t a serious attempt to win, although it
would be an incredible bonus and is possible under the right conditions, or
even so much is to get the lesser evil McAllister back in office, which serves
only as lagniappe to the real purpose of Mayo’s candidacy: to mobilize those
less informed voters to come out and vote for Sen. Mary Landrieu to survive in Washington.
The more informed natural Mayo supporters will vote anyway and for Landrieu, so
they have the luxury of peeling off to vote strategically to McAllister if they
feel it necessary.
If Abraham continues to put
daylight between himself and the other challenger Republicans, and particularly
if Brown continues to advance as well so that he could overtake McAllister, expect
that Mayo will underperform significantly as liberal Democrats try to salvage
what they can out of this contest by attempting with their crossing over to vote
McAllister into a runoff.
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