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Argentine first lady will easily win vote: poll

BUENOS AIRES
Tue Oct 9, 2007 2:50pm EDT
Senator Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (top 3rd R), Argentina's First Lady and presidential candidate, is surrounded by children during her visit to a soup kitchen in Buenos Aires October 6, 2007. REUTERS/Presidencia/Handout

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - First lady and senator Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner will easily win Argentina's October 28 presidential election, a poll showed on Tuesday.

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Fernandez will take almost 46 percent of votes, more than 30 percentage points ahead of another center-left candidate, former lawmaker Elisa Carrio, according to the survey by Argentine pollsters CEOP.

Fernandez was expected to follow the policies of her popular husband, President Nestor Kirchner, who has governed Argentina during four years of a vigorous economic rebound from a deep recession and a 2001-2 economic crisis.

The poll numbers coincided with other recent surveys showing that Fernandez was headed to a first-round victory.

Argentine presidential elections go to a second round unless the first-place candidate takes more than 45 percent of the vote, or more than 40 percent with a 10-point lead.

The poll put Roberto Lavagna, a former economy minister under Kirchner who has split with the government, in third place with 10.2 percent of votes.

The poll was based on interviews with 2,931 adults across Argentina in the past week, and had a margin of error of 1.84 percent.

CEOP said 12.4 percent of voters are undecided but that is not enough to change the outcome.

Carrio and Lavagna have both called on voters not to believe the polls, insisting they have enough support to force a second round with Fernandez.



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