Drexel students pick debate winner
Independent polling web site gets student responses
William Mulgrew
Issue date: 10/31/07 Section: Student Experience
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With 383 votes cast as of 1:04 a.m., Obama garnered 47 percent of student support. Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., finished second with 18 percent, Sens. John Edwards, D-N.C., and Joe Biden, D-Del., won 12 percent and the remaining candidates won 6 percent and less.
Obama gained three points over a pre-debate poll where 375 students expressed their preference if the Democratic primary election was held that day. At 2 p.m. Oct. 30, 44 percent of students supported Obama, 24 percent supported Clinton, 15 percent supported Edwards, with the remaining candidates drawing less than five percent.
"We don't claim that the results are scientific or representative of the school, but we think it's a good way to gauge student views," said OpenVote co-founder Colin Van Ostern.
Van Ostern said he did not think Clinton's six percent drop was due to a bad performance, but rather because other candidates simply did better.
"Students deserve to have their voice heard, but traditional polling relies on home phones and leaves college students out entirely," Van Ostern said. "It is amazing that with all the new technology and increased internet access in recent years, up until now there still has been no good way to see what a college campus thinks. OpenVote is changing that."
Currently, with over 600 votes cast, Obama has sustained the lead with 46 percent.
In the Republican primary poll, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani leads with 20 percent of the vote. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, garnered a close second with 19 percent. 45 percent of students indicated that they would not vote for any Republican candidate.
Mike Ruggieri, a pre-junior majoring in mechanical engineering, cast his vote for Obama.
"Right now, I think he has the best personality, but this early [the candidates] haven't said enough," Ruggieri said.
Vanessa Iyua, a senior majoring in psychology, said, "I'm a registered Democrat, but I'm in the middle of the road for everything."
She declined to vote in the pre-debate poll until she could learn more on the candidates' stances on the environment.
Freshman mechanical engineering major Ed McKee voted in the Republican primary poll for Paul.
"I think he's the only true conservative running. I think what our country needs is fiscal restraint and a return to the founding principles that made this country great."




Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 4
George
posted 10/31/07 @ 12:11 PM EST
Content and logic wise, I think Hillary Clinton clearly won the debate. She was very rational and reasonable with the issues, and handled personal attacks really well. (Continued…)
HeckleNJeckle
posted 10/31/07 @ 4:56 PM EST
Gravel won the debate. His anti-debate commentary showed the others as the phonies they are.
Tannim
posted 10/31/07 @ 7:03 PM EST
Ron Paul won the Democratic debate. He had support there that eclipsed the D-squad combined. It was priceless to see the MSNBC commentators having to comment about the D-squad with Ron Paul banners wallpapering the set behind them. (Continued…)
Danielle Clarke
posted 11/01/07 @ 6:54 PM EST
Obama Supporter Helps Edwards People at Rally
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/10/31/112421/68
Darrell Hyde was our best cheerleader (1+ / 0-)
Recommended by: Luam
I was there at 6am holding the best location for our
Campaign. (Continued…)
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