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27% of Iowa GOP Voters Say Cruz is NOT Eligible

I knew that's how you would respond. It's how people who have been proven wrong normally respond. I'm not going to go look for another poll because you'll find wrong with the next one too.

What I'll ask from you is since I've provided evidence that a majority of GOPers still think Obama is not eligible to be President like you asked for. You go out and find a poll that contradicts what mine is saying. It can be as partisan or bipartisan as you like.

In October 2008, the Orange County Register's OC Political Pulse poll found that a third of responding Republicans believed that Obama had been born outside the United States.[177] As a result of the widespread publicity given to the citizenship controversy, 60% of respondents in an Ohio State University survey carried out in November 2008 had heard of the issue. However, only 10% believed the claims that Obama was not a citizen.[178]

An opinion poll carried out for Daily Kos by Research 2000 in July 2009 found that 77% of Americans believed that Obama was born in the U.S., while 11% didn't, and 12% were unsure. However, Republicans and Southerners were far more likely than other political or demographic groups to doubt that Obama was born in the United States. 58% of Republicans either believed that Obama was not born in the U.S. (28%) or were not sure (30%), with 42% believing that he was. An overwhelming majority of Democrats (93%) and independents (83%) believed that he was born in the U.S. Support for the belief that Obama was born outside the U.S. was strongest in the South, where only 47% of those polled believed he was born in the U.S., compared with an average of 90% of residents of the Northeast, Midwest and West.[179] A marked racial disparity in the South was also apparent. The Politico's congressional reporter, Glenn Thrush, commented that the Research 2000 poll "explains why Republicans, including Roy Blunt, are playing footsie with the Birther fringe."[179] Writing on National Journal's Pollster.com blog, Brendan Nyhan observed that the poll "suggests that the encouragement of the birth certificate myth by conservative pundits and Republican politicians has begun to activate the GOP base on this issue."[180]

A Public Policy Polling survey carried out in August 2009 found that 32% of Republicans in Virginia thought that Obama was born in the U.S., 41% thought he was foreign-born and the remaining 27% were unsure.[181] In Utah, an August 2009 poll carried out for the Deseret News and KSL-TV found that 67% of Utahns accepted the evidence that Obama was born in the U.S. The poll found that those who do not believe that Obama was born in the United States, or do not know, are predominantly middle-aged, lower-income Republican-leaning individuals without a college education.[182]

A Pew Research Center poll found that 80% of Americans had heard about the Obama citizenship claims by August 2009. The poll found a significant partisan divide in views of the news coverage, with 58% of Democrats saying that the allegations had received too much attention from the media. Republicans were more inclined to say that the allegations had received too little attention, with 39% expressing this view against only 26% saying that the controversy had received too much attention.[183]

In a Harris Poll online survey of 2,320 adults conducted in March 2010, 25% of the respondents said they believed that Obama was "not born in the United States and so is not eligible to be president."[8] In a July 2010 CNN poll of adult Americans, 16% said they had doubts that Obama was born in the United States, and a further 11% were certain that he was not.[9]

A Gallup telephone poll of 1018 adults conducted in May 2011 found that 5% of respondents believed that Obama was "definitely born in another country" and 8% believed he was "probably born in another country", versus 47% believing he was "definitely" and 18% "probably" born in the US.[10] Broken down by political affiliation, the same poll found that 23% of self-identified Republicans, 14% of independents, and 5% of Democrats thought Obama was definitely or probably born in another country.[10]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama_citizenship_conspiracy_theories#Opinion_surveys

No majorities in any of these polls.
 
It's a hard job but I didn't want you to sound like a moron any more. I like looking out for the less fortunate.

I think you should worry about yourself and leave the rest of us to worry about ourselves. I wouldn't want you to get sick.
 
Actually, there were other issues with Obama's birth that were an issue. There are some weird cases where you can be born in the US and NOT be a citizen, and Obama might have actually been one of those. Most birthers were focused on the wrong issue about his birth and I think the Democrats wanted that as well, as that ignored the technicality that might have made him ineligible.
Right...
 
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How does this work? Obama was born in the US. The majority of GOPers say he isn't eligible. Cruz freely admits he wasn't born in the US. Only a quarter say he isn't eligible.
Can never understand dumb people.
 
The sad fact is, 99.73% of Iowa GOP voters are so stupid they're barely able to breath on their own.
 
I believe it was a wise old Indian sage that once said...

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This has to make a person wonder, lets say these 27% will vote for Trump. Even if another 1-3% break his way. Does this mean he wins Iowa?
 
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