A Western New England University Polling Institute survey of likely voters shows Elizabeth Warren leading Scott Brown 50% to 45% among likely voters. The good news: "If she continues to keep this lead over Brown, despite her unfavorability numbers having gone up, she is on a path to victory," political strategist Anthony Cignoli told the Springfield Republican. "If three weeks from now she has the same results as over the three weeks since the last WNE poll, Brown will have little time to move that distance before the election."
A bit more below the fold.
I haven't seen detailed tables on this, but from the Springfield Republican story:
Warren's leading among women by 26 points but trails among men by 18 points. She leads in every geographic region of the state except central Mass., but trails substantially there. She is also losing among independents 62-35.
He's got higher support among Republicans than she's got among Democrats, 98 to 85, although much of this survey took place before the second televised debate when Scott Brown declared that the Supreme Court justice he most admires is Antonin Scalia. Linking him to the national Republican party can only help boost her numbers among Democrats.
Brown's favorables are still higher than Warren's (no, I can't explain that either).