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Only 6% Polled Said They Would be
More Likely to Vote for a Woman After 2
Drinks
73% of Men 18-49 Would Vote for a Female
Presidential Candidate, but Only
56% of Them Would Vote for
Hillary Clinton
NEW YORK, Jan. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- If the Presidential Election were
held tomorrow, 73% of Men 18-49
would vote for a woman, but only 56% of
them would be likely to vote for
Hillary Clinton according to political
opinion poll conducted by Spike TV.*
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20060322/NYW096LOGO
)
Alcohol seemingly would not play a factor in men's voting habits.
Asked
if they had had two drinks, only
6% of men 18-49 said they would be more
likely to vote for a woman, while
the majority (61%) would be just as
likely and nearly one-quarter
(23%) said they would be less likely to vote
for a woman.
A similar pattern emerged when it came to voting for Hillary Clinton.
After two drinks 9% of Men 18-49
said they would be more likely to vote for
Clinton, while 58% were just as
likely and 26% less likely to vote for her.
"With the Primary Season in full swing, we decided to take a look
at
where guys stood on some serious
and not-so-serious issues," says Tanya
Giles, senior vice president,
research, MTVN Entertainment Group. "After
all, who but Spike TV would tell
you that most guys would prefer Barack
Obama as their wingman on a night on
the town?"
Spike TV's political opinion poll among Men 18-49 revealed that 78%
would support a divorced
presidential candidate, 76% would back an
African-American candidate and 66%
would support a candidate who was a
religious or spiritual leader.
Gauging the presidential candidate's social interaction skills, Spike
TV's poll found that 20% of Men
18-49 would choose Barack Obama
to be their
wingman at a party, while 15%
would select Clinton and 5% opting for Rudy
Giuliani or John McCain. Other
presidential candidates Mitt Romney, John
Edwards, Fred Thompson and Mike Huckabee all received less than 5% of the
vote.
When it comes to managing a professional sports team, the candidates'
political experience seemed to level the
playing field. Among Men 18-49,
14% would opt for Obama to coach an NFL team, while Mitt Romney (11%),
Hillary Clinton (10%), Rudy
Giuliani (10%), John McCain (8%) and Fred
Thompson (5%) garnering the other
significant NFL head coach votes. In
selecting a candidate to manage a
MLB team, 16% would give the ball to Rudy
Giuliani with Hillary Clinton
(13%) coming in second and Barack Obama (12%)
in clean-up. Candidates Mitt Romney
(7%), and John Edwards (5%) rounded out
the roster.
*Spike TV's political opinion poll was conducted by ICR, an
independent
research company. Telephone interviews
were conducted between December 20
to December 30 2007 among a
representative sample of 620 respondents 18 to
49 years of age. The margin of
error is +/-3.94% at the 95% confidence
level. More information about ICR can
be obtained by visiting
http://www.icrsurvey.com.
Spike TV is available in 96.1 million homes and is a division of MTV
Networks. A unit of Viacom (NYSE:
VIA, VIA.B), MTV Networks is one of the
world's leading creators of
programming and content across all media
platforms.
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