Political Hotsheet
By

Lucy Madison /

CBS News/ April 2, 2012, 1:58 PM

Poll: Brown, Warren neck-and-neck in Massachusetts Senate race

Elizabeth Warren and Sen. Scott Brown, who are running in Massachusetts' closely watched U.S. Senate race.

/ CBS/Getty Images
A new poll from the Boston Globe is confirming what many political spectators have believed for months: the Massachusetts Senate race between Democrat Elizabeth Warren and Republican Scott Brown is looking to be very, very close.

According to the survey, conducted from March 21-27 among 544 voters, the two are in a statistical dead heat: Brown earned 37 percent support to Warren's 35 percent support - which falls well within the poll's +/- 4.2 percent margin of error.

Notably, 26 percent of voters said they had not yet made up their minds. Among those who had made up their mind, the survey results remained similarly close: Brown holds a 51-48 percent edge over Warren, again within the poll's margin of error. 

The race is expected to be one of the most closely-watched in the country: Warren, a consumer advocate who spearheaded the beginning of the Obama administration's Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), is seen as a liberal icon and rising star in the party. Brown, an incumbent Republican who won the seat in a special election following Ted Kennedy's death, has built his reputation as a moderate Republican who's not afraid to break party lines. Both candidates have touted strong values as political selling points, and have proven themselves to be powerful fundraisers with strong party backing.

Still, neither candidate has yet been able to claim front-runner status. While Warren's outspoken support for issues like gay marriage and financial reform have earned her enthusiastic support among liberals, it's unclear how some of her views will play among Massachusetts' more moderate working class voters. Brown, meanwhile, seeks to maintain his support among moderate and conservative Democrats - a demographic that helped lead him to victory in 2010 in the solidly blue state.

According to the Globe survey, both candidates have strong support among certain key groups. Brown performs well among independent voters, who backed him over Warren nearly 3-1, while most moderate and conservative Democrats opt for Warren.

Both candidates have high favorability ratings: 54 percent of respondents said they viewed Brown favorably, and 47 percent said the same of Warren. For Brown, that number is a slight uptick from August 2011, when he had 49 percent favorability. Warren's favorability rating, however, has doubled in the same period. In August 2011, only 23 percent of voters viewed her favorably; 60 percent, meanwhile, said they didn't know enough to say, which likely reflected a lack of name recognition for Warren at the time.

And while Warren certainly remains less well-known than Brown - in the March survey, 25 percent of Massachusetts voters opted "don't know" when polled on her favorability, while only 7 percent said the same of Brown - the numbers would suggest that people increasingly know who she is.

One area in which Brown excels that could be significant, however, is likeability, in which he outranks Warren 57 percent to 23 percent. He is also seen as more bipartisan than Warren.

Warren, on the other hand, is perceived as the candidate who would do more for working people. She also has strong support among Democrats, liberals, upper-class voters, and those with a post-graduate degree.

Ultimately, the contest between the two candidates - two nationally well-known figures with strong party support and substantial campaign coffers - will likely be neck-and-neck all the way to Election Day.

Andrew E. Smith, the director of the University of New Hampshire's Survey Center, which conducted the poll, told the Globe that the race remains "wide open."

"Unless something dramatic happens, this will go down to the wire," he said.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
16 Comments Add a Comment
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TimeToEvolve says:
Since the Republicons have made it quite clear they only care about the rich white men of the Top 1%, they will all be in trouble. The only reason they get elected is pumping massive corporate money in and fraudulent elections. Unfortunately, almost all our elections are fixed now although I will still vote.
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allanjones1942 says:
brown is a rino....so it is a tossup ....i don't really care who wins, if he hadn't voted like a dem then he might have had a better chance....
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occupy_cbs says:
"the two are in a statistical dead heat: Brown earned 37 percent support to Warren's 35 percent support - which falls well within the poll's +/- 4.2 percent margin of error."



Looks like there will be quite a few competitive races for Congress in 2012 -- many that the republicans thought they had 'locked-up'.
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stormerF69 says:
Talk about voting for the most unqualified,Elizabeth Warren comes to mind. Surely the people of MASS,can not be fooled into voting for this woman?
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occupy_cbs says:
DJ332013: "Wow, you really love to lie."

DJ332013: "You are a complete failure."

DJ332013: "You are nuts. The only terrorist in this country are people like you who can't seem to understand anything. My God, I hope November comes and America shows you how lame you are."






And with posts like that, you want adults to think you're not just another juvenile in 5th grade, sneaking on your momma's computer?
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occupy_cbs replies:
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The topic is:
Poll: Brown, Warren neck-and-neck in Massachusetts Senate race

YOU add nothing to the discussion with your off-topic bush/cheney apologist drivel, so tell us what you think of scott brown.
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tvwatcher5345 says:
brown sided with lieberman to push legislation to have someone lose their citizenship if they were only SUSPECTED of associating with a terrorist group, i don't know what constitution brown was reading that day, but beyond that do you know how many irish around boston would lose their citizenship?...i think i might vote for the guy
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TimeToEvolve says:
The only reason most of the current Republicon economic terrorists are in office is that people stayed home in 2010. Between removing the wackos from office like in Wisconsin and people coming out for the presidential election, there is going to be some serious Government of Pigs (GOP) head rolling.
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TimeToEvolve replies:
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Miss the Butch Cheney Crime Family huh? Want more of your money going to the top while our schools, roads and highways fall apart. Want to see 50 million Americans without healthcare while tens of thousands die each year? Wow!
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liberalmike says:
Hopefully the democrat wins!
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tcaldie says:
TimeToEvolve, Your an idiot!! If you were half intelligent and could read you would know that Brown has not voted in lock step with the Reps. and he has been a great supporter of women's rights as well as gay rights. But you obviously feel that women are too stupid to see that and they will follow like sheep and will vote in lock step to your views. Fortunately most women are smarter than your ******* and will vote for either candidate based on facts and not your propaganda!!
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TimeToEvolve replies:
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Why did he vote against Obama Cares?
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Raptorsmasher says:
Isn't that what one would expect from an intelligent state?
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