Advertisement

Poll: Romney tops Perry in Ohio

Republican candidates for president Mitt Romney (L) and Gov. Rick Perry participate in the Tea Party Republican Debate at Florida State Fairgrounds. UPI/Christina Mendenhall.
Republican candidates for president Mitt Romney (L) and Gov. Rick Perry participate in the Tea Party Republican Debate at Florida State Fairgrounds. UPI/Christina Mendenhall. | License Photo

HAMDEN, Conn., Sept. 28 (UPI) -- Ohio Republicans favor presidential hopeful Mitt Romney over Rick Perry, but both are neck-and-neck with President Obama in the Buckeye state, a poll indicated.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, led the field with 24 percent, while Texas Gov. Perry was second with 20 percent, a Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday said.

Advertisement

No other candidate captured more than 9 percent, results indicated.

Among all contenders, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin -- who hasn't indicated whether she'll enter the GOP race -- garnered 9 percent, followed by businessman Herman Cain at 7 percent, Rep. Ron Paul of Texas at 6 percent, and former Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich at 4 percent each. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota was eighth with 3 percent.

If Palin doesn't run, Romney gets 25 percent to Perry's 21 percent, the Hamden, Conn., university said.

In a hypothetical general election match-up, Obama would get 44 percent to Perry's 41 percent, too close to call when factoring the margin of error, pollsters said. In an Obama-Romney tilt, the president would get 44 percent to Romney's 42 percent, also too close to call.

Advertisement

Results are based on telephone surveys of 1,301 registered voters from Sept. 20-25. The margin of error is 4.8 percent.

Latest Headlines