With just over 40 days left until Election Day for Virginia governor, Democrat Terry McAuliffe has a five-point edge over Republican Ken Cuccinelli in a new NBC4/NBC News/Marist poll, fueled by a significant advantage with female voters and the GOP candidate’s rising negatives.
McAuliffe leads Cuccinelli, 43%-38%. Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis gets 8%, and 10% remain undecided.
The new poll, just ahead of a Wednesday debate between the two candidates moderated by The Daily Rundown host and NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd, is largely in line with other recent public and private polling, showing McAuliffe, a businessman and former Democratic National Committee chairman, taking a slight lead over Cuccinelli, the sitting attorney general.
The numbers have shifted significantly since NBC’s last poll in the race, which showed Cuccinelli leading 45%-42% among likely voters.
The biggest reason for McAuliffe’s lead are a significant gender gap and high unfavorables. McAuliffe is leading Cuccinelli by 18 points among women, 50%-32%, with repeated Democratic attacks against the attorney general’s conservative social positions seeming to resonate. Cuccinelli is leading among male voters, 44%-36%.
Cuccinelli’s unfavorables have flipped since the spring survey. Now, he’s underwater with likely voters–47% have a negative opinion of the GOP nominee, while just 34% have a positive opinion. That’s a significant shift since May, when 42% said they viewed Cuccinelli positively, with just 27% negatively.
McAuliffe, who’s faced questions over his GreenTech, his former electric car businesses, and the success of his other business ventures, still holds a net positive rating, with 41% of those polled saying they have a positive view of him, and 34% viewing him negatively. Republicans are sure to step up their attacks on McAuliffe in the race’s final months and more than a quarter of voters say they still don’t have an opinion of McAuliffe, leaving Republicans room to still define the Democrat.









