Poll: Judge Roy Moore Holds Commanding 17-Point Lead in Alabama, Has ‘United’ Republicans Behind Him – IOTW Report

Poll: Judge Roy Moore Holds Commanding 17-Point Lead in Alabama, Has ‘United’ Republicans Behind Him

Breitbart: Judge Roy Moore holds a commanding lead in the Alabama Senate race and has “united” local Republicans behind him, according to a poll released Tuesday — data that crushes the establishment narrative that Moore is a divisive figure who may botch a winnable election.

The poll, first reported by Politico, was put out in a polling memo by the McConnell-backed Senate Leadership Fund which campaigned vigorously for Moore’s primary rival Sen. Luther Strange (R-AL). But, despite warnings from establishment voices that Moore was too extreme and could cost the GOP a safe seat, the poll shows the exact opposite.  read more

9 Comments on Poll: Judge Roy Moore Holds Commanding 17-Point Lead in Alabama, Has ‘United’ Republicans Behind Him

  1. The more these incumbent, embedded, establishment swampers rally around each other, like back-scrubbing bathers in a barrel, the closer we come to throwing them all out in one purge along with the lukewarm bathwater/urine that they marinate in.

    They’ve erased all distinctions of R or D, or ideology. They clearly care more for themselves than country or any of us.

  2. The more (Moore) this happens, and when these candidates win, they can look down their noses at the ‘establishment’ Repubs in Congress and say “You said I couldn’t win, but here I am. What else are you completely wrong about?”

  3. @Smudge–I don’t think patriots need no ‘steenkin’ signs. (Although stealing them does give Democrats something to do at night when they’re drunk.)

    I’m starting to take exception to the term ‘republican’, I prefer American, it’s even a ‘grander older party’.

  4. @Smudge–he doesn’t have yard signs! You also haven’t seen any ads of his on TV either.

    Doug Jones, the Demoncrat, is running a lot of ads but never anywhere in the ad does it have the word Democrat or (D).

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