Another day, another poll of the Democratic primary for Florida governor. Only this one shows Philip Levine on top instead of Gwen Graham, with Andrew Gillum surging late but perhaps from too far back to catch up in a week, and the others fading.
A new tracking poll from SEA Polling and Strategic Design, taken Sunday through Tuesday, shows former Miami Beach Mayor Levine leading the former U.S. Rep. Graham 26 percent to 25 percent among all Democrats surveyed, 27 to 25 among those who've already voted, and 28 to 27 among those who are the surest to vote in the primary.
The Democratic gubernatorial primary is next Tuesday, and increasingly looking like a two-person race.
Gillum is running third for all three groups, but eight to 10 percentage points behind Levine in each. Palm Beach businessman Jeff Greene is lagging in the low- to middle-teens for support, and Winter Park businessman Chris King has all but stalled in the single digits.
Fifteen percent of Florida Democrats say they are still undecided about their choice for Governor, hardly enough to make a difference for anyone but Levine or Graham.
SEA's latest poll was of 669 Democrats, and the firm is citing a margin of error of 3.8 percent.
Levine has slipped just a bit froman identifical survey SEA Polling conductedand released last week, and so the contest between him and Graham has tightened from a Levine lead that had been in the outer edges of the margin of error to one that's virtually a dead heat.
Gillum appears to have benefitted the most from Levine's slip. As with other polls released this week, his position has risen, likely due at least in part to his campaigning late last week with U.S. Sen. Bernie Sandersof Vermont.
However, as with most of the other recent polls, Gillum remains significantly behind the leaders.
SEA finds that voters have pretty favorable views of Levine, Graham and Gillum. Levine got a favorable rating from 57 percent of those surveyed and unfavorable from 18. Graham's split was 54 and 20. Gillum's was 45 and 11.