
How bad are they? Well, when asked who was their first pick for presidential nominee, Romney (24%) and Gingrich (23%) are in a statistical tie for first place, followed by Perry (18%), evangelical favorite Rick Santorum (15%) and Ron Paul (12%). Perry also comes fourth on "second choice" (actually, technically he, Romney, Gingrich and Santorum are in a low-teens statistical tie for second place, while "Unsure" wins on 39%.)
Just for some context: Perry, who has staked his political future on South Carolina, is currently running fifth on 6% in multiple polls in the Palmetto State. However, no matter how badly South Carolinians reject him, Perry has already committed to move on to Florida where he is flickering between 2% and 4%. Considering the baffling commitment to staying on the trail, no matter how much donor money is burnt, it seems unlikely these new Texas numbers will dent the Perry camp's enthusiasm.
Here's where it may get even more alarming for Perry in Texas. Even though he tops the favorability index with 60% approval (compared to 53% for Santorum, 48% for Gingrich, 44% for Romney and only 32% for Paul), he's still trailing in third as the presidential pick for Texas Republicans. That means that even people who like him don't like him enough to vote for him.
The bad news rolls on for Perry: He's also in a statistical tie with Romney in a straight head-to-head (46%-45%.) The bad news for Romney is that the only clear head-to-head win for him is against Paul (64%-25%).
And what about Paul? 90% of people polled had an opinion of the state's other presidential aspirant, but 59% of respondents said they had an unfavorable opinion of him. And that's gotta hurt.
Read the full numbers here.
Rick Perry, The Perry Trap, Polls, Election 2012, 2012 Primaries, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney, Public Policy Polling