Poll shows Chafee, Caprio in dead heat
for R.I. governor
Though
he has been out of office since losing his U.S. Senate seat in 2006, Chafee
would be in a statistical "dead heat" with General Treasurer Frank T. Caprio
and he would lead the state's two-term Attorney General Patrick C. Lynch by 11
points if he faced either Democrat today in a three-way race for governor,
according to a WPRI-TV, Channel 12 poll released Friday night.
In
each of the three-way matchups, Governor
Carcieri's former communications director John Robitaille, a Republican,
trailed the pack.
Delving
into the psyche of Rhode Island's voters, the survey of 501 registered voters
conducted Jan. 27-31 also found festering dissatisfaction with the direction in
which the state is headed. Republican Governor Carcieri got poor grades from 59
percent of the electorate. One-quarter blamed Carcieri and the Democrat-led General
Assembly equally for state's budget problems.
But
many more people (53 percent) blamed the state's part-time lawmakers for the
state's unrelenting budget crisis, than the governor (15 percent).
Fleming
said the results suggest Rhode Islanders agree six-to-one with the governor's
no tax increase approach to digging the state out. The poll did not, however,
ask those surveyed if they believed the steep local aid cuts Carcieri has
proposed would force widespread property tax increases, as municipal leaders have
said.
In
one matchup, Chafee had 34 percent, Lynch 23 percent, and Robitaille, 18
percent with 22 percent unsure. In the other, Chafee had 31 percent, Caprio 30
percent, Robitaille 13 percent with 23 percent unsure.
Republican-turned-independent
Chafee is "grabbing votes from all over," Fleming said, including some
Republicans and a good number of Democrats, while winning a contest with Caprio
for the independent vote. "Right now, that makes him a credible candidate,"
Fleming said, but he questioned if voters would return on Election Day to their
"traditional roots." Among the candidates, there were mixed reactions.
"At
this point, it's all about name recognition. And I'm not going to read much
into it," Robitaille said, adding that the poll offered some cause for optimism
just three weeks after he announced his candidacy. "I am surprised that I have
numbers as high as I do, and that I'm as close to Patrick Lynch as I am."
The
Caprio camp hailed the poll as "good news," and drew attention to the
treasurer's job approval rating of 44 percent, with many fewer people ranking
his performance as "fair to poor" than was so for Lynch, who had a 40-percent
approval, 52-percent disapproval response.
"Having
the strongest job-approval numbers of any elected R.I. official, other than
[U.S. Sen.] Jack
Reed, means that from what voters know of Frank, they seem to like him, and
having the highest unknowns, means there is a lot of room for him to grow as
Rhode Islanders get to know Frank," Caprio's spokeswoman Margie O'Brien said.
Mikus
said a poll might reflect any one of the politically unpopular decisions that
Lynch makes as attorney general. Lynch, for example, has been the target of
recent criticism for his handling of a corruption investigation into Central
Falls Mayor Charles Moreau. Mikus dismissed the criticism as "a complete
distortion of the facts," but could not say whether the issue hurt Lynch in the
recent poll.
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Lincoln Chafee has forged a path of independence and he is now prepared, with your support, to bring his unquestioned integrity, proven record of working together for the common good, and ability to represent our state at the highest levels of business and government to the Governor's Office.

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