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Washington : Popularity of Indian-American Bobby Jindal, a Republican presidential aspirant, has increased significantly in the crucial swing State of Iowa, but his national popularity ratings remains abysmally low,
latest opinion polls have shown.
"It's worth noting that Bobby Jindal enjoys more support in Iowa than he does nationally. He is among the top ten candidates in Iowa, but his showing in the national polls makes it unlikely he will gain entry to the first debate,"
Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute said after the release of latest polling data.
Scott Walker emerged as the first choice of 22 per cent of the Iowa Republicans followed by Donald Trump at 13 per cent when they were asked who they would support in their local caucus.
The next group of candidates includes Ben Carson (eight per cent), Jeb Bush (seven per cent), Ted Cruz (seven per cent), the 2008 Iowa winner Mike Huckabee (six per cent), Marco Rubio (five per cent), Rand Paul (five per cent), and Bobby Jindal (four per cent), Rick Santorum (three per cent) - who won the Iowa caucuses in 2012 - Rick Perry (three per cent), and Carly Fiorina (three per cent) are tied for 10th
place.
According to the poll, Jindal has a 59 per cent favorability rating against a 12 per cent unfavorability rating. However, in the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll, Jindal is ranked 12 with just two per cent of the popular votes in the crowded GOP presidential candidates. Donald Trump with 24 per cent is leading the race, followed by Scott Walker (13 per cent) and Jeb Bush (12 per
cent).
Following latest Iowa opinion poll results, Jindal said his presidential campaign is gaining momentum. "I've been campaigning hard in Iowa ever since I announced for President a little less than a month ago. Our crowds have been growing
each day, and it's starting to show," he said. "I'm not a big believer in polls, but a new one came out this morning that shows we've got the momentum. We're seeing
huge movement from less than three weeks of campaigning," Jindal said.
Jindal performed remarkably well at the Family Leadership Summit in Iowa last week.
"The Republican who did best at the event was Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal... He demonstrated his political talent on Saturday. Jindal received a number of spontaneous standing ovations, including one that lasted nearly half a minute after
he bashed the media for having a liberal, pro-Obama bias," The Guardian reported.
Jindal won over the crowd by consistently offering up red meat with lines like "America did not create religious liberty - religious liberty created the United States of America" while bashing the supreme court on same-sex marriage,' the
newspaper said.
Meanwhile, in an interview to The New York Times, Donanld Trump, who is now leading the Republican presidential race, dismissed Jindal's candidacy. "You get guys like Perry, he's not registering, Bobby Jindal was very vehement - oh, bah bah. I think he's at zero," Trump was quoted as saying by the daily.
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