
""Notably, groups that are more favorable toward Markey, including women and young voters, are also more undecided than their counterparts; women are ten points more undecided than men (33% to 23%), and 39% of voters under 50 are undecided compared to 21% of voters over 50," said Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, in a statement."
Markey leads Moulton in the Democratic Senate primary, but the gap is narrowing. An Emerson College poll among likely voters shows Markey at 37% support and Moulton at 32%. A Suffolk University/Boston Globe poll last month showed Markey at 47% and Moulton at 30%. The Emerson poll finds Markey leading among registered Democrats by 13 points, while Moulton leads among unenrolled voters by six points. Moulton’s campaign emphasizes the age difference, arguing for a new generation of leaders. Markey leads among voters under 50, while voters over 50 are more evenly split. Women favor Markey more than men, and undecided voters are higher among women and younger voters. Two long-shot candidates poll around 1%.
Read at Boston.com
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