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Giuliani, McCain Top U.S. Political Ranking

September 09, 2006

- Many American adults hold a favourable opinion of Rudy Giuliani, according to a poll by the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. Respondents gave the former New York City mayor a mean rating of 64.1, the highest among 20 politicians surveyed.

Giuliani garnered national and international attention in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and has formed a political action committee called Solutions America. The former mayor has been mentioned as a possible Republican nominee in the 2008 United States presidential election.

Republican Arizona senator John McCain, U.S. state secretary Condoleezza Rice and Democratic Illinois senator Barack Obama were the only other persons who surpassed the 50-point mark. Connecticut senator Joe Lieberman was next with 49.5, followed by former Democratic North Carolina senator John Edwards with 48.5, and former Virginia governor Mark Warner with 47.7.

U.S. president George W. Bush earned a rating of 46.4, slightly higher than Democratic New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and former U.S. vice-president Al Gore.

Obama was unknown to 54 per cent of respondents. More than seven-in-ten Americans could not form an opinion on Warner, Republican Virginia senator George Allen, and Democratic Indiana senator Evan Bayh.

Polling Data

I'd like to get your feelings toward some of our political leaders and other people who have been in the news. I'll read the name of a person and I'd like you to rate that person using something called the feeling thermometer. You can choose any number between 0 and 100. The higher the number, the warmer or more favourable you feel toward that person, the lower the number, the colder or less favourable. If we come to a person who you haven't heard enough about to form an opinion, you don't need to rate the person. Just tell me and we'll move on to the next one.

Mean Rating

Unknown to

Rudy Giuliani

64.1

12%

John McCain

57.5

15%

Condoleezza Rice

56.8

7%

Barack Obama

54.9

54%

Joe Lieberman

49.5

17%

John Edwards

48.5

22%

Mark Warner

47.7

73%

Mitt Romney

46.8

69%

George W. Bush

46.4

1%

Hillary Rodham Clinton

46.1

1%

Al Gore

45.5

2%

Bill Frist

45.5

53%

George Allen

44.8

72%

Joseph Biden

44.6

53%

Evan Bayh

43.6

75%

John Kerry

43.5

6%

Russ Feingold

40.5

66%

Chris Dodd

39.8

65%

Harry Reid

37.9

65%

Nancy Pelosi

34.7

53%

Source: Quinnipiac University Polling Institute
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 1,080 registered American voters, conducted from Aug. 17 to Aug. 23, 2006. Margin of error is 3 per cent.