The statement is ambiguous, and depends on whether you’re binding “2/3 of people” or “any other candidate” to a value first. It can mean either the intended:
for each other candidate on offer:
about 2/3 of people prefer Kasich to that candidate
Or:
there exists a group of about 2/3 of people that:
for each other candidate on offer:
everyone in the group prefers Kasich to that candidate
I think the ambiguity is clear in context, however, since the latter is so clearly false.
The statement is ambiguous, and depends on whether you’re binding “2/3 of people” or “any other candidate” to a value first. It can mean either the intended:
Or:
I think the ambiguity is clear in context, however, since the latter is so clearly false.