My Ears Hurt, The Reality About Polls, Wake Up CT Post!

Quinnipiac Poll: June 2010, Ned Lamont 39, Dan Malloy 22. Malloy wins August primary by double digits.

Quinnipiac Poll: July 2010, Tom Foley 48, Michael Fedele 13. Fedele loses by just a couple of points and if he had one more week he fillets Foley.

What did Malloy and Fedele have in common? Public financing, yes, but both had only begun in earnest–Malloy June and Fedele July–to blast their message.

When I managed Bill Finch’s campaign for state senate in 2000, our poll had Finch trailing Republican Lee Scarpetti by 25 points first week of September. Finch won by double digits.

Finch’s own internal poll had him trailing State Rep. Chris Caruso by 10 points two months before the September 2007 mayoral primary. Finch defeated Caruso by a couple of points.

On Monday I received phone calls, emails from readers, friends, pols, etc. some of whom like Finch–but don’t like the way he governs–astonished at the results of the latest OIB poll. Finch leading all potential candidates should not be a shock. No one is running a serious race against him yet.

John Gomes has announced, but can he raise money? Caruso has been relatively quiet. Beyond taking the lead on derailing Jodi’s jail on the Upper East Side, the Big Wave has been silent this past year. He hasn’t said anything about the budget deficit, nothing about layoffs, Finch job hires while little people get pink-slipped,  little about education and crime, or a proposal for a regional wastewater treatment authority. Nothing about Finch’s campaign pledge to cut taxes $600 only to raise them by more than that since he’s been in office. Caruso, who does not have a November challenge, is waiting for the election to run its course before he makes a final decision to get in the mayoral game. Why would a majority of voters knight him, one year from a primary, the front runner?

No elected official has taken on Finch beyond City Councilman Bob Walsh. We try to do our part here at little OIB informing readers about the kooky world of city politics and government. We have a couple of thousand active Bridgeport readers and I dare say all of them vote. But Bridgeport also has many thousands more in the city that don’t know (or care) that this outlet exists.

The Connecticut Post? My friends there have decided better to cover the ‘burbs. One reporter, Keila Torres (she’s mighty good) covers the city on a regular basis. She cannot do it alone. Yes, it’s amazing Hearst Newspapers has just one full-time scribe to cover the state’s largest city. Actually, it’s pathetic. So a lot of the stuff that gets debated here might get picked up by the Post a week later, if at all. No one at The Post covers City Hall on a regular basis. That’s just the way City Hall likes it. Oh, no one’s watching? We can do what we want. Finch has no clue what it’s like to have a half-dozen or more first-class reporters covering the administration. If that were the case Chief of Staff Adam Wood and Communications Director Elaine Ficarra would have a closet full of barf bags in their offices.

So that’s part of the reason Finch runs ahead of potential opponents. At this stage of the game, however, I don’t pay attention so much to the head-to-head beauty contests. What struck me most in the OIB poll was the question of right direction/wrong direction. By a walloping margin city Dems say the city’s going in the wrong direction. That creates a huge hole for either Finch to fill as mayor or an opponent to fill.

OIB will poll again in November. Any other candidates want to get in the game?

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8 comments

  1. *** Too early yet to take any local political polls seriously; & the more candidates for Mayor the better, no? Yeah, more candidates looking for something under the disguise of running for Mayor & what can you do for me first, family second & then my peeps? Nothing’s changed or is going to change ’til things change @ the district level first! As for the CT Post, I stopped receiving it in Jan. 2010. I prefer to read the Advocate or some of the other “free” papers available in town, they seem to cover local events much better than the Post. *** Back to basics! ***

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  2. One of the problems is that the Connecticut Post Shopping Mall’s leadership has no sense of the history of Bridgeport. Torres is good but proven journalists who know the town have been put out to the pasture relegated to writing columns. WICC gets its news from the paper and they are always a day late and a dollar short on their stories.

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    1. I buy the paper but I hardly read it. I buy it along with The New York Post and some others so customers will have something to read while they wait. The issues and the papers’ perspective of them are often laughable. I’m with Mojo on this I also prefer the Advocate and other free papers.

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  3. That negative number in the Finch poll had my ears up as well.
    You know more about this stuff than I do Lennie, but wouldn’t it be better to do a follow-up poll after the holidays, say in the second week of January?
    Tracking polls like the current one are fine but I think there will be a better sense of what’s going on after the November election. The Finch negative number may be just be a reflection of the grumpiness all over the nation. There is not an organization dedicated to opposition to the mayor just yet. (Gomes hasn’t shown anything except serial bloggers to this webzine.) It is hard to judge.

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    1. Fantastic point. I was waiting for someone to raise the grumpiness issue. That’s why we asked these two questions together.

      Q1. First, in general, do you feel that things in the United States are moving in the right
      direction, or have they gotten off on the wrong track?
      Right Direction 36.84%
      Wrong Track 38.08%
      Staying the same 10.02%
      Not sure 15.07%

      Q2. Thank you! Now, how do you feel things are going in Bridgeport? Do you feel that
      things in Bridgeport are moving in the right direction, or do you feel that things have
      gotten off on the wrong track.
      Right Direction 17.27%
      Wrong Track 51.91%
      Staying the same 21.64%
      Not sure 9.18%

      As you can see voters are grumpy about things national but not nearly as grumpy as the state of the city.

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    2. Jim Callahan // Sep 28, 2010 at 1:18 pm
      responding to your posting

      Thought I offered more to the conversation than title of “serial blogger” for Gomes, nonetheless, you mentioned Gomes and I offer to you that Gomes is following the first commandment of campaign … solidify your base.

      The Gomes base is not a base you personally might count seriously Jim, however the poll told us enough so that we know the right decision was made to officially register in April 2010.

      And for a guy out of nowhere, Gomes pulls a 14% in a head-to-head with Finch. I am pretty sure the
      undecideds are not going for Finch at this point in the day …

      It’s worth exploring how pervasive the negatives are. We know they are in the cellar with an unusually high number of City employees. Even if we know why, how deeply does that translate to the psyche of the voting public?

      Does that translate into an historic change which Bridgeport voters may certainly be willing to take …

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