How These City Employees Turned Taxpayer Cash Into Instagram Profits
Here's What Ron DeSantis Said When Asked Whether He Will Run for President...
Police Slap Fake Drug Charge on Man After He Tried to Report Them...
Radical Lefty Streamer Hasan Piker Joining MI Democrat Senate Candidate Abdul El-Sayed at...
Katie Pavlich Grills Democrat Over Sanctuary Policies After Chicago Murder
Sen. Kennedy Hammers Schumer, Democrats Over Shutdown
Delta Suspends Stand-Alone Service for Congress Until TSA Is Fully Funded
NJ Gov. Mikie Sherrill Visits Mosque Run by a Radical Imam With Troubling...
Here's Why the Venezuelan Illegal Immigrant Who Killed a College Student Missed His...
Election Day Means… Election Day
Gun Rights Advocate Sues New Jersey Over 'Denied' Public Records
Democrat Wisconsin House Candidate Campaigns With Architect of Sanctuary City Policies
Republican Senate Candidate John Sununu Could Win in New Hampshire According to a...
Judge Rejects Bid to Kick Eric Swalwell Off the California Governor Ballot
Trump Unloads on Joe Kent Over His Resignation As He Makes Clear He...
Tipsheet

AZ Sen: New Poll Shows McSally Narrowing the Gap

AZ Sen: New Poll Shows McSally Narrowing the Gap
AP Photo/Rick Scuteri

For months, Arizona Senate candidate Mark Kelly has enjoyed a wide lead over incumbent Martha McSally in one of the nation's most closely-watched races. But a recent survey now shows McSally is catching up.

Advertisement

The poll, conducted by the Phoenix-based research group OH Predictive Insights, shows McSally trailing the former astronaut by only five percent. As the survey notes, Kelly led his Republican opponent by nine points just last month and by 13 points in May.

Although McSally’s chances are looking up, it’s not because her support has increased. Instead, the number of voters backing Kelly has dropped from 52 percent to 48 percent. That’s the first time since March that his support has fallen below the halfway mark.

A key reason for Kelly’s decline is the negative campaign advertising being pushed by the McSally camp and Republican organizations. The National Republican Senatorial Committee recently purchased a $5.7 million television ad highlighting Kelly’s business ties with China. It suggests that a Chinese tech company called Tencent, which invested in an Arizona-based commercial space exploration venture Kelly helped create in 2014, uses its connections with World View and other U.S. companies to steal U.S. space technology. It also suggests that Kelly’s financial gains from Chinese investments have made him a sell-out for China and a defender of their actions against the U.S. and the world, according to a report by ABC15.

Advertisement

“The spending by McSally and the NRSC over the past few months seems to have started taking its toll on Mark Kelly’s relatively high favorability,” OHPI Chief Mike Noble said in a press release, “something the McSally campaign desperately needed given her own ever-decreasing favorability numbers.”

Another boost for McSally appears to come from Independent voters. In July, Kelly dominated Independents 59 percent to McSally’s 32 percent. That lead has since dropped by 12 points, bringing his lead to 47 percent to 34 percent. 

The erosion of Kelly’s Independent supporters is an intriguing trend that could make a big difference in November, according to Jacob Joss, a data analyst for OHPI. 

“If McSally continues on her current flight path, she has a shot at winning this election,” Joss predicted.

McSally’s comeback is just the latest reason for Arizona conservatives to feel optimistic. Last week’s primary elections showed that conservative values can defeat unprecedented spending by outside PACs and overcome Democrats' legal games. Despite liberal claims that Arizona has turned purple, the battle for the Grand Canyon State is far from over.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement