With less than two months until Election Day in Virginia, Democrat Terry McAuliffe has a narrow three-point lead over Republican Ken Cuccinelli, leading 44%-41% in a new poll in the swing state’s bitter gubernatorial contest.
This is the first Quinnipiac University poll that’s included Libertarian nominee Robert Sarvis, and he draws a surprising 7% among likely voters. While his final margin likely won’t be that high, his presence could have an outsized influence in a close race where many voters aren’t happy with either of the two major party nominees.
“Right now, we can’t tell whether Sarvis’ candidacy is hurting Cuccinelli more than McAuliffe,” Peter A. Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, said in a release. “The Libertarian candidate is getting 3% of the Republican vote and 2% of the Democratic vote, but 14% of independent voters.”
But while McAuliffe’s slim two-point lead is within the poll’s margin of error, other numbers are more troubling for Cuccinelli. Fifty-one percent of voters now say they have an unfavorable view of the attorney general, with just 34% holding a favorable opinion. For McAuliffe, a former Democratic National Committee Chairman, voters are evenly split on his favorability at 38%.
And as he has in previous polls, the Republican continues to lag among critical female voters. McAuliffe leads women 49%-35%, while Cuccinelli leads among men, 47%-40%.
Independent voters are also evenly split between both the GOP and Democratic nominee, with 37% apiece. But that’s far behind what Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell got during his successful 2009 campaign, with exit polling showing him doubling his Democratic challenger among independents.
Cuccinelli’s campaign trumpeted the new polling numbers though, which shows them much closer to McAuliffe than other recent public and private polls.









