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| Gov. Quinn struggles to meet-and-greet supporters as union members protest his policies at the 2012 Illinois State Fair. Photo courtesy of the A.P. | 
There have been 
twenty-two surveys
 of the 2014 Illinois Governor race since Republican businessman and 
challenger Bruce Rauner captured his party's nomination in March. 
Governor Pat Quinn has led in only two of them, averaging 39% across all
 twenty-two polls (a number that should strike fear in the heart of any 
incumbent).
The Huffington Post Pollster average puts the challenger 
ahead 46-44%,
 and gives Rauner a 53% chance of defeating Quinn in November - again, 
making it very clear that Quinn is receiving no benefit whatsoever from 
the power of incumbency. In fact, from a purely polling perspective, 
Quinn is one of the most vulnerable Governors and/or Senators in the 
country. His job job approval rating is
 awful (see 
here, 
here, & 
here as well). Only 
Tom Corbett, 
Sam Brownback, 
Dan Malloy, and 
Mary Landrieu trail their opponents by a larger margin on Pollster.
Fortunately
 for Democrats, Pat Quinn has proven himself quite resilient in the face
 of awful polling and brutal political headwinds before.
Look no further than four years ago, when after a bitter contest and 
razor-thin victory
 in the Democratic primary, Pat Quinn was elected to his own full term 
as Governor, having stepped into the role in 2009 after former Gov. 
Blagojevich was famously 
removed from office. His job approval ratings that year were disastrous, even on the 
eve of the election.
 The general election head-to-head numbers were horrendous. Of the 
thirty-three publicly released polls following the Feb 2, 2010 
primaries, Quinn trailed his Republican challenger in 
ALL but two.
 The final Pollster average in 2010 found Bill Brady (R) ahead by eight 
points. The final RCP average found Brady up five points. Pollster and 
Real Clear Politics even picked up on a last minute surge for Brady! They were 
obviously wrong,
 as Governor Quinn went on to win 47-46%. And it was arguably the 
largest polling miss of the 2010 cycle (ranking right up there with the 
infamously incorrectly polled Nevada Senate race between 
Harry Reid and Sharon Angle).
Further
 complicating things for Republican chances at picking up this 
Governorship this year, the most prolific pollster to date in the Illinois race, 
We Ask America, has somewhat of a problematic 
track record, particularly
 in Illinois.
 Not to mention the fact that they make up 36% of all Illinois Governor 
polls taken since the March 18th primary. To date, their results have 
been highly favorable to Bruce Rauner. Out of their eight surveys taken since 
the March 18 primary, Rauner has led in all of them, by as little as 
three points, and as much as 
fourteen.
Great news for the GOP, right? Well, not when you consider that We Ask America's 
only two surveys of the 2010 Illinois Governor race found Republican 
challenger Bill Brady ahead by 
ten and 
fifteen points, the latter of which was Brady's largest poll lead of the entire cycle.
This
 isn't to pick on We Ask America. As noted above, all of the pollsters 
were off in this race in 2010. Rasmussen Reports final poll on October 20, 2010 
found Brady ahead of Quinn 
by eight points, which also happened to be the final Pollster average.
 PPP, 
Fox News, 
YouGov, the 
Chicago Tribune,
 and literally every other pollster in the final weeks of the 2010 
campaign missed the mark, and none of them projected the actual winner.
So
 while the Democrats are again in the position of having to defend an 
unpopular Governor and unpopular President in an unfriendly political 
environment, history would suggest you should not underestimate Governor
 Pat Quinn. In 2010, polling that consistently favored the Republican 
challenger the entire time wound up being wrong. Given that, Governor 
Quinn may be the happiest (and luckiest) vulnerable incumbent running 
this year.
One final note: the three most recent surveys are all good news for Gov. Quinn. The first 
Chicago Tribune poll
 of the cycle finds Quinn surging into an eleven point, 48-37% lead over
 Rauner - easily his largest lead of both the 2014 and 2010 elections. A
 Global Strategy Group poll done on behalf of the Democratic Governor 
Association also finds a rare Quinn 
lead of 43-40%. Finally, a nearly brand-new We Ask America survey actually finds Rauner 
ahead 44-41%, but notes that the new figures represent a significant tightening from their last poll just three weeks ago when 
Rauner led Quinn 46-37%.