According to the poll, Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate and Arizona governors Blake Masters and Kari Lake have strong double-digit leads in the rest of the key areas involved.
A Gateway Pundit/Cygnal poll found Thiel Foundation head Masters was the most popular candidate among prospective primary voters, with 29.9% of responses. He leads his closest rival Jim Lamon with 10.3 points (19.6%). Mark Brnovich received 17.9 percent of responses, while Michael McGuire or Justin Olson, who received 5.3 and 1.9 percent, respectively, failed to pass 10 percent. The other 25.3% were undecided. The primary winner will face incumbent Senator Mark Kelly (DR) in the general election.
Former President Donald J. Trump endorsed the Masters in June, and the ensuing Trafalgar Group and Public Policy Survey put the Masters first over the rest of the mainstream space. In April, before Trump’s endorsement, Masters was ranked third in a Trafalgar poll at the time.
Trump said in part in his endorsement:
Blake is pushing for border security, especially with the disaster on the southern border where millions of people flocked to the US and destroyed our country. Blake could quickly change that. It will also cut taxes and regulations, fight crime, and support our military and veterinarians. Blake will fight our totally suppressed Second Amendment and WIN!
Former Phoenix Fox 10 reporter Lake, who won Trump’s support in September, won 45.4 percent of the vote in the crowd, according to the Gateway Pundit/Cygnal poll. He was in second place with 33.7%, 11.7 points ahead of Karrin Taylor Robson. Matt Salmon, Scott Neely, and Paolo Tulliani-Zen received less than three percent of the vote, suggesting that the race was indeed between Lake and Robson, with less than three weeks to the primary on August 2. 14.2% of the voters remained undecided.
“Strong in crime, he will protect our border, Second Amendment, military and veterinarians, and will protect electoral integrity (both past and future!) against Covid lockdown, cancellation of culture and ‘wake-up’ curriculum in our schools,” he said.
59.1 percent of respondents identified themselves as “Trump Republicans”.[s],” and 38 percent said they were “traditionally conservative Republicans.”[s]”.
The poll polled 419 prospective primary voters via SMS and interactive voice response from 12 to 13 July. It has a plus or minus error of 4.78 percent.
Source: Breitbart