I don't know if this has been posted yet (I searched but couldn't find it), but I found something interesting a while back.
Digg.com has an ongoing election:
http://digg.com/elections/
Anyone who can join Digg can choose a candidate as a "friend," to cast their vote.
Anyway, given the popularity of Digg (117th most visited site, according to Alexa) and its demographic (young, college-educated technogeeks), I think the results are pretty intriguing.
The media repeatedly refers to Obama, Hillary Clinton, Giuliani, and Romney as "top tier."
But their conclusions are based upon polls among the general population of likely voters -- not targetting those likely voters who actually know where the candidates stand and decide based upon that. In such a poll, people like Giuliani and Hillary are going to automatically get a lead over people like Obama and Ron Paul, not because they're genuinely popular, but simply because of name-recognition.
Grassroots popularity is more important in the long-run than name-recognition. Think back to the 2000 elections: George Bush was relatively unknown early in the election, but he won due to grassroots support.
And when you look at grassroots groups like the DailyKos or Free Republic, Kucinich is every bit a "top tier" candidate as any other, and the same goes for Ron Paul, Tom Tancredo, and Mike Huckabee.
In conclusion, on the Democratic side, while the media seems to be casting its vote for Hillary, I think Obama has a greater likelihood of winning the primary. Because he's got a lot of name-recognition from his early announcement and a lot of media coverage leading up to the primaries, while at the same time seems to be supported by a genuine grassroots movement. If Kucinich drops out of the race due to lack of funding, it would even further solidify Obama's lead over Hillary, as he'd have full control of the partisan vote. Meanwhile, Hillary would end up splitting the independent vote with John Edwards, and possibly even a few independent votes could go towards Obama.
Considering the recent growth of the youth vote, the Digg results above are even more striking.
Digg.com has an ongoing election:
http://digg.com/elections/
Anyone who can join Digg can choose a candidate as a "friend," to cast their vote.
Anyway, given the popularity of Digg (117th most visited site, according to Alexa) and its demographic (young, college-educated technogeeks), I think the results are pretty intriguing.
The media repeatedly refers to Obama, Hillary Clinton, Giuliani, and Romney as "top tier."
But their conclusions are based upon polls among the general population of likely voters -- not targetting those likely voters who actually know where the candidates stand and decide based upon that. In such a poll, people like Giuliani and Hillary are going to automatically get a lead over people like Obama and Ron Paul, not because they're genuinely popular, but simply because of name-recognition.
Grassroots popularity is more important in the long-run than name-recognition. Think back to the 2000 elections: George Bush was relatively unknown early in the election, but he won due to grassroots support.
And when you look at grassroots groups like the DailyKos or Free Republic, Kucinich is every bit a "top tier" candidate as any other, and the same goes for Ron Paul, Tom Tancredo, and Mike Huckabee.
In conclusion, on the Democratic side, while the media seems to be casting its vote for Hillary, I think Obama has a greater likelihood of winning the primary. Because he's got a lot of name-recognition from his early announcement and a lot of media coverage leading up to the primaries, while at the same time seems to be supported by a genuine grassroots movement. If Kucinich drops out of the race due to lack of funding, it would even further solidify Obama's lead over Hillary, as he'd have full control of the partisan vote. Meanwhile, Hillary would end up splitting the independent vote with John Edwards, and possibly even a few independent votes could go towards Obama.
Considering the recent growth of the youth vote, the Digg results above are even more striking.

=Me without internet!!!