Updated Iowa, New Hampshire Polling Averages and Results

NOTE: Scroll Down for Newest Posts
This table will remain at the top of the main page through the GOP Primary Season in January and early-February.

Iowa / New Hampshire Polling Averages/Results

Updated: 1/10/12, 10:15 AM ET

Candidate

Primary Date

Iowa

Caucus Results

1/3/12

New Hampshire

1/10/2012

                  LEADER

Romney Wins +0.1

Romney +19.0

Romney

24.6

36.5

Paul

21.4

17.5

Santorum

24.5

11.5

Gingrich

13.3

10.8

Perry

10.3

1.0

Huntsman

0.6

16.3

Bachmann

5.0

Withdrew

Note: Iowa Caucus Results are listed, and a 3-Day Poll Average is listed for New Hampshire. Click on the state names above for polling data, more averages, or final results.

 

The Iowa Caucuses are in the books, and New Hampshire Primary will take place January 10, 2012. We’ll keep this table with the averages at the top of the main page. As new polls come out, we’ll update it. To see all the polling data over the last 21 days with more averages, just click on the state name in the table. Click on the “Iowa” state name in the table to see the final vote totals for the Caucuses.

You can check averages in other early-voting states here.

  • Harrah

    Romney’s just too far ahead in New Hampshire for Santorum to catch him. But he might make it much closer.

  • Rexinla

    If you look at the final poll results page for Iowa, Santorum way outperformed what the final polling average was. He really had the momentum. It will be interesting to see if that happens in New Hampshire.

  • Flip Flop Romney

    The poll numbers for Romney look all fine and dandy, but they are stagnant or going down. Romney polled higher at one time in NH, and he did worse in Iowa in 2012 (24.6%) than he did in 2008 (25.2%) even though millions of dollars were spent in Iowa to try and boost his numbers.

    In fact, the Weekly Standard reported that Romney’s 24.6% in Iowa was the worst ever for anyone winning that causus, even lower than Bob Dole’s then all-time low of 26%.


Support the Wounded Warrior Project

Poll of the Week


Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

Follow Us


on twitteron facebookby RSS feed