Chattanooga Times Free Press

Kelly expands lead in new poll

- BY SARAH GRACE TAYLOR STAFF WRITER

New polling shows Tim Kelly’s lead growing in the Chattanoog­a mayoral race, while the gap between the next three candidates is closing.

According to a poll of 550 likely voters conducted this week by Spry Strategies, a Knoxville-based polling outfit hired by local conservati­ve group Hamilton Flourishin­g, Kelly is polling at 27.9%, up from 21.7% in the group’s January poll.

The shift puts a 12.7 percentage point gap between him and second place, almost doubling his previous 6.4 percentage point lead.

“We’re proud and humbled to say that we have a tremendous amount of momentum

all over the city because of our hard working, policy-focused, grassroots campaign,” Rachel Hanson, Kelly’s campaign manager, said Saturday via email. “We’ll keep working and campaignin­g like we are behind and earn every vote possible until the polls close on election night.”

While the polling favors Kelly, if those numbers are reflective of the actual vote turnout on and before March 2, he would still need nearly all of the 24.9% of undecided voters to avoid a runoff.

In the event that no candidate gets at least one vote over 50% of the total ballots, the top two candidates will face off in an April runoff election.

The possibilit­y of the runoff makes the narrowing gap between the second-, third- and fourthplac­e candidates important.

In the month since Spry’s last mayoral poll, Former River City Co. President Kim White has stayed virtually the same, dropping slightly from 15.3% in January to 15.2% this week.

Still, White is optimistic. “The momentum of our campaign continues to build each day, evidenced by our widespread financial contributi­ons, dedicated volunteers and endorsemen­ts and support from our police organizati­ons, Greater Chattanoog­a Realtors and the Chattanoog­a Free Press, among others,” she said Saturday in an emailed statement.

Behind White are former City Attorney Wade Hinton and entreprene­ur Monty Bruell, still polling at third and fourth place, respective­ly. But both Hinton and Bruell have gained ground in the poll, putting them each within the margin of error of the person ahead of them.

Hinton, who narrowly out-fundraised Kelly, moved from 8.9% in January to 12.2% in the newest poll. Now, he’s just 3% behind White.

“Leadership matters, and the voters know it. As we turn the corner on the COVID-19 pandemic, Chattanoog­ans don’t need a mayor who requires on-the-job training or a long learning curve — they need a leader who’s ready to go on day one,” Spencer Bowers, a spokespers­on for Hinton’s campaign, said Saturday. “The more voters hear Wade’s story and see the depth of his experience building up communitie­s, the more they are convinced he’s the best prepared to lead our recovery and ensure a safer, more equitable, and inclusive future for everyone. Our supporters are making hundreds of calls and knocking on thousands of doors with Wade every day. We take these results as proof that voters like what they hear and a challenge that we keep working harder than ever.”

Bruell moved up from 5.6% in January to 8.1%, situating himself just behind where Hinton was last month.

“I suppose that it’s always fun to play around with poll results, but polling is really more voodoo science than anything. In recent elections, pollsters have been wrong more than they’ve been right. Generally, the only candidate that puts stock in poll results is the one shown leading,” Bruell told the Times Free Press on Friday. “I can feel our campaign surging. We definitely have momentum. Now that we’ve been endorsed by the Chattanoog­a Times, our momentum will only increase. I love our engagement with voters and am confident about our chances to win this election. The undecided voters will most likely determine the outcome.”

In this week’s poll, undecided voters were asked to identify the candidate they favored, showing a much smaller lead for Kelly (16%) and favoring Hinton (12.3%) over White (9.4%). Councilman Erskine Oglesby was fourth among undecided voters, with 6%, followed closely by Bruell with 5.5%.

Spry Strategies President Ryan Burrell said he anticipate­s the race will come down to Hinton, Kelly and White.

“The mayoral race has heated up and is a three-way race with Tim Kelly maintainin­g a strong double-digit lead. Wade Hinton has gained ground but is still trailing Kim White. Kim has had a good trajectory and has developed a diverse, grassroots campaign with strong fundraisin­g,” Burrell said in an emailed statement Friday. “When you look at the cross tabs, Tim Kelly has strong support across all the demographi­cs, Kim White is polling well with women and self-identified conservati­ves, and Wade Hinton has excellent support from the African American community. There are three strong candidates with excellent name ID when you look at the favorable/unfavorabl­e ratios.”

Burrell also noted that, in modeling of the poll which anticipate­s higher Republican and female turnout based on past election turnout trends, White is slightly more favorable, but the top four candidates remain in the same order.

Councilman Russell Gilbert, businessma­n Andrew McLaren, Oglesby, and former NAACP President Elenora Woods all polled under 5% in the newest poll. Less than 2% of respondent­s said they would support another candidate.

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 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTOS ?? Clockwise from top left, Chattanoog­a mayoral candidates Tim Kelly, Kim White, Wade Hinton and Monty Bruell.
STAFF FILE PHOTOS Clockwise from top left, Chattanoog­a mayoral candidates Tim Kelly, Kim White, Wade Hinton and Monty Bruell.

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