Five weeks before Minnesotans elect a new governor, DFL candidate Mark Dayton leads GOP rival Tom Emmer among likely voters, with Independence Party candidate Tom Horner gaining ground, a Star Tribune Minnesota Poll has found.
In the three-way race, Dayton leads Emmer 39 to 30 percent, nearly unchanged from a July Minnesota Poll. Horner is at 18 percent, up from 13 percent in July.
Dayton spokeswoman Katharine Tinucci said the poll "sounds like good news" but added, "There's 38 days to go, and we're going to continue to work hard."
Emmer spokesman Carl Kuhl said, "This just shows once again that this is a competitive race that's going to go down to the wire, and we're going to continue to work hard toward the only poll that matters, on November 2nd."
Horner's improved showing appears to be the result of winning over some voters who recently made up their minds. But his support is significantly softer than that of his opponents, with only 2 percent of likely voters saying their support for Horner is strong.
Horner spokesman Matt Lewis attributed the soft support to Horner not being "as well defined as Emmer or Dayton." He predicted Horner would gain attention in coming debates and other public appearances. "We're moving in the right direction," Lewis said.
The poll of 949 likely voters, taken Sept. 20-23, suggests that little has changed in voters' minds since the last Minnesota Poll in July, despite two intensive months of harsh advertising, almost daily debates and new details from all the candidates on how they plan to address the state's daunting budget deficit.
Dayton's lead is outside the poll's margin of error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points. The telephone poll included cell phone users, who are considered more likely to lean Democratic than people who use only landlines.