



Des Moines, Iowa, Dec 31: Democrat Hillary Clinton holds a slim lead in Iowa over Barack Obama and a rising John Edwards, who are tied for second place three days before the state opens the presidential nominating race, according to a Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby poll released on Monday.
In the tight Republican contest in Iowa, Mike Huckabee narrowly leads Mitt Romney, who slipped by one point to trail 29% to 27%. John McCain gained two points but remained a distant third at 13 %.
About 6% of likely caucus-goers in each party remain undecided of their choice in Thursday's contest, the first big test in the state-by-state battle to choose Republican and Democratic candidates in November's presidential election.
"It's about as close as you can get at the top in both races," pollster John Zogby said. "But it's still very uncertain." The poll of 899 likely Democratic caucus-goers and 902 likely Republican caucus-goers was taken Thursday through Saturday and has a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points for each party.
Most of the top candidates in both parties have been crisscrossing Iowa for days in a late hunt for support that could give them an edge and momentum for later contests. The poll showed Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady, leading Edwards and Illinois Sen. Obama by four points, 30% to 26%. Edwards, a former North Carolina senator, gained two points overnight to pull even with Obama.
Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson were at 5 percent. Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich were at 1 percent.
"Edwards had a good day by virtue especially of increasing support among independent voters," Zogby said. Edwards led narrowly among independents over Clinton and Obama.
The poll found Clinton's supporters remained the most dedicated with 73% saying their support was "very" strong, compared to 66% for Edwards and 63% for Obama. Under Iowa's arcane caucus rules, candidates must receive support from 15% of the participants in each precinct to be viable. If not, their supporters can switch to other candidates.
—Reuters
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