Attention Sens. Jeff Flake and John McCain: Fully 6 percent of Arizona voters support the Senate's health care plan.

You read that right: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 percent.

Six.

As the Senate prepares to vote on a “skinny repeal” version that its members haven’t seen – and don’t actually want to see enacted – a new statewide poll shows that half of Arizona voters would prefer to keep Obamacare but make revisions to the law

Another 36 percent want to repeal and replace it.

Where McCain, Flake stand on the bill

“What’s currently on the table is not popular with Arizona voters,” said Mike Noble, managing partner and chief pollster at OH Predictive Insights, which conducted the poll on Wednesday.

Something for both McCain and Flake to think about.

McCain on Thursday panned "skinny repeal" but left the door open to voting for it as long as he has assurances the House won't actually pass it – that a final bill will hammered out in a conference committee. How that squares with his call just two days ago for bipartisan cooperation remains to be seen.

McCain has also said said he'll do whatever Gov. Doug Ducey wants. Hard to see how Ducey could support a skinny bill that would blow up already rocketing insurance premiums by another 20 percent, according to a CBO analysis.

Flake, meanwhile, has thus far supported every one of the various doomed versions of the Senate health-care bill. It’s easy to see why.

Poll is particularly bad news for Flake

While only 11 percent of Republican voters polled support the current Senate bill, 59 percent want the Affordable Care Act repealed and replaced.

Look for Flake to go along with whatever comes along. He's up for re-election next year and likely will face either state Treasurer Jeff DeWit or former GOP Chairman Robert Graham in the primary. Either would be a formidable candidate.

Then again, former state Sen. Kelli Ward is also in the race and seems destined to serve the role of spoiler, so Flake likely isn't laying awake nights worrying.

But perhaps he should be. If he gets out of the primary, Flake will face all voters, a whopping 6 percent of whom support what the Senate is doing.

The automated poll of 700 Arizona voters was conducted Wednesday. It has a margin of error of 3.7 percent.

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