Jerry Seinfeld's Duke Commencement Wasn't Derailed by Pro-Hamas Antics
How To Neutralize The Campus Communists
Democrats Are Getting Desperate, Now Is The Time To Twist The Knife
National Insecurity, Courtesy of Joe Biden
America’s Accountability Crisis
The Most Important Date In American History
A 'Never Again Trump' Guide To Voting Trump
Eurovision: The Silent Majority and the Vocal Minority
Biden’s Middle Eastern Foreign Policy Blunders
Unbridled Corruption of the Iranian Regime
This is How We Will Have to Fight Cheating in the 2024 Election
Traitor Joe's
Joe Biden Mother’s Day Message Sparks Outrage
Florida Proves It Doesn't Mess Around After 'Queers for Palestine' Block Entrance to...
Four Honduran Illegals Caught Selling Enough Fentanyl to Kill 1.6 Million Americans
Tipsheet

Dodd Takes a Dive

Connecticut voters haven’t forgotten the sweetheart mortgage their state’s senior senator took from Countrywide while overseeing what we are repeatedly told is the greatest banking and housing in history as Chairman of the Senate’s Banking Committee.
Advertisement


51 percent of Connecticut voters said they “probably won’t” or “definitely won’t” vote to reelect him in 2010, according to Quinnipiac.

These are the worst ratings Dodd has ever received. 42 percent of voters said they would “definitely” or “probably” vote for Dodd.

“Sen. Dodd is vulnerable. His approval has sunk to a new low. More voters disapprove than approve of the job he is doing for the first time in 15 years of polling,” Quinnipiac University Poll Director Douglas Schwartz said. “The mortgage controversy has taken a toll on his approval rating. Most voters are not satisfied with Dodd's explanation and say they are less likely to vote for him next year because of it.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement