Which GOP candidate should drop out next?
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Ted Cruz won Iowa. Donald Trump leads in New Hampshire. Marco Rubio has broken from the peloton to place third in the latest national polls.
Yes, yes, but who鈥檚 tanking? That鈥檚 our subject today. With a pause before Saturday night鈥檚 GOP debate and next Tuesday鈥檚 Granite State primary it鈥檚 time to talk about which Republican candidate may be the next to face the inevitable and drop out of the race.
YouGov released on this question today and they鈥檙e a good start for the discussion. This survey of Republican voters was taken on February 3-4, so it reflects Iowa caucus results.
The top choice is obvious, if you remember he鈥檚 still running. Fully 89 percent of YouGov respondents said that Jim Gilmore should drop out of the race. Problem is, the former Virginia governor is only mounting a low-cost, low-impact campaign, with no ads and little organization. It doesn鈥檛 cost much to walk for president, as opposed to run, so he doesn鈥檛 actually have much incentive to stop.聽
鈥淪tarted out as 1 of 17 GOP Candidates, now with Rand Paul & Rick Santorum out, 1 of 9,鈥 聽Mr. Gilmore on February 3.
We鈥檒l skip YouGov鈥檚 second and third-place finishers in the drop-out poll, because, well, they鈥檝e read the numbers on the wall. As Gilmore noted, Rick Santorum (#2) and Rand Paul (#3) suspended their campaigns this week. For them, the people have spoken. Unfortunately.
Number four on this list is where it gets real. Is it time for John Kasich to quit? Seventy percent of YouGov respondents said 鈥測es,鈥 but that鈥檚 highly unlikely to happen before next Tuesday鈥檚 New Hampshire primary. Mr. Kasich has put virtually all his time and money into Granite State campaigning. If he breaks double-digits in the vote there, beating Jeb Bush, Chris Christie, and the rest of the establishment crowd, he might try to hang on. If his cash doesn鈥檛 run out, that is.
Perhaps surprisingly, Carly Fiorina is the crowd鈥檚 next choice for withdrawal. Sixty-eight percent of YouGov respondents said she should quit now. Her brief, debate-fueled boomlet lasted only a week or so last fall, and since then she鈥檚 languished, with her average poll numbers down at around two percent.
Fiorina speaks well, though, and the GOP elite clearly wants her around, so that the candidates aren鈥檛 all men. That could keep her in a few weeks more.
After that come Chris Christie and Jeb Bush. About 63 percent of GOP voters think the moderate East Coast governor and ex-governor should pack it in, according to the YouGov poll. At least one, and quite possibly both, of them will almost certainly quit after New Hampshire. They might even pack it in right after the New Hampshire polls close.
The only hope for Governor Christie and Mr. Bush is to break out and challenge Mr.Rubio for the coveted spot of highest-ranking finisher who isn鈥檛 a senator from Texas or a billionaire real estate developer. Bush has loads of cash, and might trudge on to South Carolina regardless; Christie doesn鈥檛, and New Hampshire is his last and only hope.
After them there isn鈥檛 a candidate who a majority of GOP voters want gone. Ben Carson鈥檚 campaign isn鈥檛 doing well. It鈥檚 firing workers as the candidate鈥檚 numbers drop. But the retired surgeon remains popular in the party, and only 43 percent think he should quit, according to YouGov results.
And the front-runners? Twelve percent of YouGov respondents want Mr. Trump to fire himself and go back to the private sector. Six percent want Rubio and Mr. Cruz to quit.聽