2008 Presidential Polls

VegasGuy

Star
OG Investor
By ROBIN TONER and DALIA SUSSMAN

WASHINGTON — In the past two months, Senator Barack Obama has built a commanding coalition among Democratic voters, with especially strong support among men, and is now viewed by most Democrats as the candidate best able to defeat Senator John McCain, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News Poll.

After 40 Democratic primaries and caucuses, capped by a winning streak in 11 contests over the last two weeks, Mr. Obama has made substantial gains across most major demographic groups in the Democratic Party, including men and women, liberals and moderates, higher- and lower-income voters, and those with and without college degrees.

But there are signs of vulnerability for Mr. Obama in this national poll: While he has a strong lead among Democratic voters on his ability to unite and inspire the country, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton is still viewed by more Democrats as better prepared for the job of president. And while he has made progress among women, he still faces a striking gender gap: Mr. Obama is backed by two-thirds of the Democratic men and 45 percent of the women. White women remain a Clinton stronghold.

When all voters are asked to look ahead to the general election, Mr. McCain, the likely Republican nominee, is seen as better prepared for the presidency, better able to handle an international crisis and more equipped to serve as commander in chief than either of the Democratic candidates. The poll provides a snapshot of Mr. Obama’s strength after this first, frenzied round of primaries and caucuses, which knocked seven of the nine Democratic candidates out of the race. For the first time in a New York Times/CBS News Poll, he moved ahead of Mrs. Clinton nationally, with 54 percent of Democratic primary voters saying they wanted to see him nominated, while 38 percent preferred Mrs. Clinton. A new USA Today/Gallup Poll released Monday showed a similar result, 51 percent for Mr. Obama to 39 percent for Mrs. Clinton.

These national polls are not predictive of the Democratic candidates’ standings in individual states, notably Ohio and Texas, which hold the next big-delegate primaries on March 4. Most recent polls there show a neck-and-neck race in Texas, with Mrs. Clinton having a lead in Ohio; her campaign advisers say that if she prevails next Tuesday the race will begin anew.

But the NYT/CBS News poll shows that Mr. Obama’s coalition — originally derided by critics as confined to upper-income reformers, young people and African-Americans — has broadened widely. In December, for example, he had the support of 26 percent of the male Democratic primary voters; in the latest poll, that figure had climbed to 67 percent.

“He’s from Illinois and I’m from Illinois and he reminds me of Abraham Lincoln,” said Dylan Jones, 53, a laborer from Oxford, N.C., who was interviewed in a follow-up to the poll. “I can see him out there splitting rails. I don’t have anything against Hillary Clinton, so I guess it’s because he’s new blood.”

Similarly, Mr. Obama’s support among those with household incomes under $50,000 rose to 48 percent from 35 percent since December. His support among moderates rose to 59 percent from 28 percent. In contrast, Mrs. Clinton’s strength among Democratic men dropped to 28 percent from 42 percent in December; her support among voters in households making under $50,000 held stable.

Even among women, Mr. Obama made strides — he had the support of 19 percent of white women in December, and 40 percent in the most recent poll. White women, however, remain Mrs. Clinton’s most loyal base of support — 51 percent backed the senator from New York, statistically unchanged from the 48 percent who backed her in December.

“I like them both,” said Ann Powers, 63, a coordinator for special-education programs in Fort Dodge, Iowa. “I just think he is too inexperienced and she’s dealt with more in the last 20 years.” Billie Stimoff, a 72-year-old retiree from Kodak, Tenn., said, “It’s time to see what a woman can do because men sure have made a mess of things.”

The national telephone poll was conducted Feb. 20-24 with 1,115 registered voters, including 427 Democratic primary voters and 327 Republican primary voters. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points for all voters, plus or minus five percentage points for Democratic voters and plus or minus five percentage points for Republican voters.

The poll showed Republicans settling in with their likely nominee. Eight in ten said they would be satisfied if Mr. McCain wins their party’s nomination, although just 3 in 10 said they would be very satisfied. Nearly 9 in 10 said he was prepared for the presidency and more than 8 in 10 said they had confidence in his ability to deal with an international crisis, while a remarkable 96 percent said he would likely make an effective commander in chief.

But misgivings remain among those who describe themselves as conservative Republicans, with a majority of those voters saying his positions on the issues are not conservative enough.

On the Democratic side, primary voters indicated they saw few substantive differences between their candidates on issues like the war in Iraq and health care. Most Democratic voters have confidence in both candidates to handle the economy, the war in Iraq and an international crisis. And large numbers think it is likely that either candidate would make an effective commander-in-chief.

Mr. Obama’s advantages are more apparent on other measures. Nearly 6 in 10 say he has the best chance of beating Mr. McCain, double the numbers who believed Mrs. Clinton was more electable. He is also viewed by more Democratic voters as someone who can bring about “real change” in the way things are done in Washington and is willing to compromise with Republicans “the right amount” to get things done.

Democratic voters are also more likely to say Mr. Obama cares a lot about them, inspires them and can unite the country. Sixty-three percent of Democratic voters said he cares a lot about them, while fewer than half think Mrs. Clinton does. Nearly seven in 10 say he inspires them about the future of the country; 54 percent say Mrs. Clinton does. Three-quarters say he would be able to unite the country as president; 53 percent say Mrs. Clinton would.

Mrs. Clinton also has her strengths: Her supporters are, in general, more committed; nearly 8 in 10 of Mrs. Clinton’s backers say they strongly favor her, while 6 in ten of Mr. Obama’s supporters strongly favor him. Only 18 percent of her supporters back her with reservations; about a third of Mr. Obama’s supporters said they had reservations about him.

Democratic women are also more likely to say that the news media have been harder on Mrs. Clinton than on other candidates: 56 percent felt that way, compared with 39 percent of the Democratic men. Both men and women were more likely to think the media have been harder on Mrs. Clinton than on Mr. Obama.

Not surprisingly, Democratic primary voters have an opinion on the appropriate role of the 795 super-delegates who could decide this year’s election; more than half said that these uncommitted delegates should vote for the candidate who received the most votes in the primaries and caucuses.

Marjorie Connelly, Megan Thee and Marina Stefan contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/26/us/politics/26cnd-poll.html?hp

-VG
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
2008 Presidential Election Electoral Vote Projections

<IFRAME SRC="http://electoralprojection.blogspot.com/2008/05/2008-presidential-electoral-vote_19.html" WIDTH=790 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://electoralprojection.blogspot.com/2008/05/2008-presidential-electoral-vote_19.html">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

Player+

Star
Registered
Re: 2008 Presidential Election Electoral Vote Projections

Keep in mind that Obama is doing that well without even being declared the Democratic nominee yet. McCain has basically been riding unopposed for months. These numbers will change.

:yes:
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="6"><center>Barack’s Bounce</font size><font size="4">
The latest NEWSWEEK Poll shows the Democrat
with a 15-point lead over McCain.</font size></center>


080620_PollObama_dl-vertical.jpg

The new Newsweek poll shows Obama gaining
ground among Hillary Clinton supporters.
Emmanuel Dunand / AFP-Getty Images

By Michael Hirsh | Newsweek Web Exclusive
Jun 20, 2008 | Updated: 3:37 p.m. ET Jun 20, 2008


Barack finally has his bounce.

For weeks many political experts and pollsters have been wondering why the race between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain had stayed so tight, even after the Illinois senator wrested the nomination from Hillary Clinton. With numbers consistently showing rock-bottom approval ratings for President Bush and a large majority of Americans unhappy with the country's direction, the opposing-party candidate should, in the normal course, have attracted more disaffected voters.

Now it looks as if Obama is doing just that. A new NEWSWEEK Poll shows that he has a substantial double-digit lead, 51 percent to 36 percent, over McCain among registered voters nationwide.

In the previous NEWSWEEK Poll, completed in late May when Clinton was still fighting him hard for the Democratic nomination, Obama managed no better than a 46 percent tie with McCain. But as pollster Larry Hugick points out, that may have had a lot to do with all the mutual mudslinging going on between the two Democrats. By contrast, in recent weeks Clinton has not only endorsed Obama but has made plans to campaign with him. "They were in a pitched battle, and that's going to impact things. Now that we've gotten away from that period, this is the kind of bounce they've been talking about," said Hugick.


The Latest Numbers

The latest numbers on voter dissatisfaction suggest that Obama may enjoy more than one bounce.
  • The new poll finds that only 14 percent of Americans say they are satisfied with the direction of the country. That matches the previous low point on this measure recorded in June 1992, when a brief recession contributed to Bill Clinton's victory over Bush's father, incumbent George H.W. Bush.

  • Overall, voters see Obama as the preferred agent of "change" by a margin of 51 percent to 27 percent.

  • Younger voters, in particular, are more likely to see Obama that way: those 18 to 39 favor the Illinois senator by 66 percent to 27 percent. The two candidates are statistically tied among older voters.


Party Identification Advantage

Obama's current lead also reflects the large party-identification advantage the Democrats now enjoy: 55 percent of all voters call themselves Democrats or say they lean toward the party while just 36 percent call themselves Republicans or lean that way. Even as McCain seeks to gain voters by distancing himself from the unpopular Bush and emphasizing his maverick image, he is suffering from the GOP's poor reputation among many voters. Still, history provides hope for the GOP. Hugick points out that in May 1988 when the primaries ended, Democrat Michael Dukakis enjoyed a 54 percent to 38 percent lead over George H.W. Bush. But Bush wound up winning handily. "Those results should give people pause," Hugick says, saying that a substantial number of voters, about 5 percent, have also moved into the undecided column. A significant improvement in the economy, or continued advances in Iraq—an issue McCain has identified with strongly as the senator who championed the "surge" first—could alter the Republican's fortunes.


Compare Obama Now - With Gore & Kerry at Same Point

For now, however, Obama is running much stronger at this point in the race than his two most recent Democratic predecessors, Sen. John Kerry and Vice President Al Gore, who both failed in their bids to win the White House. In a July 2004 NEWSWEEK Poll, Kerry led Bush by only 6 points (51 percent to 45 percent). In June 2000, Gore was in a dead heat with Bush (45 percent to 45 percent)—which is essentially where he ended up when that razor-thin election was finally decided.

Most other national polls have shown Obama with a 4 to 5 point lead over McCain so far. Random statistical error can explain some of the difference in poll results. The NEWSWEEK survey of 1,010 adults nationwide on June 18 and 19, 2008, has a margin of error of 4 points. But the latest evidence of his gaining ground goes well beyond that margin.

Obama seems to have built his margin in part by picking up a key slice of Clinton's support, including women. Women voters in the new poll prefer him over McCain by 21 points (54 percent versus 33 percent). Defections to McCain by Hillary Clinton supporters are also down significantly since she dropped out of the race and endorsed the Obama. In the new poll, registered Democrats and Democratic leaners who supported Clinton during the primaries now favor Obama over McCain by 69 percent to 18 percent. In last month's survey, Clinton supporters backed the Illinois senator by a significantly smaller margin, 53 percent to 34 percent. Registered independents have also moved toward Obama, backing him by a 48 percent to 36 percent margin after splitting about evenly in last month's poll.

Obama's personal ratings have improved, as well: 62 percent of voters overall say they have a favorable opinion of him compared to only 26 percent who have an unfavorable opinion. By comparison, McCain's ratings are 49 percent favorable to 37 percent unfavorable, representing a drop from his previous 54 percent favorable rating. In the previous poll, coming at a time when Clinton's attacks on him were still fresh in Democrats' minds, Obama's favorability ratings were just 55 percent favorable versus 40 percent unfavorable. In the new survey, Clinton supporters' view of Obama have turned solidly positive (70 percent favorable versus 18 percent unfavorable).

Obama is trusted more to handle what may prove the biggest issue of the 2008 election--the economy and jobs—by a wide margin (54 percent to 29 percent). He also has a sizable advantage on energy policy, 48 percent to 34 percent, despite McCain's attempts this week to turn voters his way by supporting some new oil drilling and renewing his call for a gas-tax holiday. Voters do not lean as strongly to Obama on the issue of the Iraq War, but he is still preferred over McCain by 46 percent to 40 percent.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/142465
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
logo-sub.gif


<font size="5">General Election: McCain vs. Obama</font size>


Poll: USA Today/Gallup
Date: 06/15 - 06/19
Obama: 50
McCain 44
Spread: Obama +6.0


Poll: Newsweek
Date: 06/18 - 06/19
Obama: 51
McCain 36
Spread: Obama +15.0


Poll: FOX News
Date: 06/17 - 06/18
Obama: 45
McCain 41
Spread: Obama +4.0


Poll: Rasmussen Tracking
Date: 06/17 - 06/19
Obama: 48
McCain 44
Spread: Obama +4.0

Poll: Gallup Tracking
Date: 06/16 - 06/19
Obama: 46
McCain 44
Spread: Obama +2.0


Poll: Reuters/Zogby
Date: 06/12 - 06/14
Obama: 47
McCain 42
Spread: Obama +5.0


Poll: ABC News/Wash Post
Date: 06/12 - 06/15
Obama: 49
McCain 45
Spread: Obama +4.0


Poll: Cook/RT Strategies
Date: 06/12 - 06/15
Obama: 44
McCain 40
Spread: Obama +4.0


<font size="4">The Real Clear Politics Average
(RCP Average) of the polls above:</font size>
Date: June 12, 2008 through June 19, 2008
Obama: 47.5
McCain 42.0
Spread: Obama +5.5


http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/us/general_election_mccain_vs_obama-225.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">
Remember those two "Big States" (Ohio and Pennsylvania)
that Hillary said: her victory over Obama showed that only
she
could carry against John McCain ?
</font size>

<font size="3">Ohio</font size>
Poll: Rasmussen
Date" 06/17 - 06/17
Obama: 43
McCain: 44
Spread: McCain +1.0

Poll: Quinnipiac
Date:] 06/09 - 06/16
Obama: 48
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +6.0


Poll: PPP (D)
Date: 06/14 - 06/15
Obama: 50
McCain: 39
Spread: Obama +11.0

Real Clear Politics Average:
Date:
06/09 - 06/17
Obama: 47.0
McCain: 41.7
<font size="3">Obama +5.3 </font size>



<font size="3">Pennsylvania</font size>

Poll: Quinnipiac​

Date: 06/09 - 06/16
Obama: 52
McCain: 40
Spread: Obama +12.0


Rasmussen
Date: 05/21 - 05/21 500
Obama: 45
Date: 43
Spread: Obama +2.0


SurveyUSA
Date: 05/16 - 05/18
Obama: 48
McCain: 40
Spread: Obama +8.0


Susquehanna
Date: 05/01 - 05/06
Obama: 46
McCain: 39
Spread: Obama +7.0


Real Clear Politics Average:
Date:
05/01 - 06/16
Obama: 47.8
McCain: 40.5
<font size="3">Obama +7.3 </font size>​

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/pa/pennsylvania_mccain_vs_obama-244.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>New poll suggests
Obama can beat McCain in Florida</font size>
<font size="4">
Obama leads in South Florida</font size></center>

Miami Herald
BY BETH REINHARD
breinhard@MiamiHerald.com
Mon, Jun. 23, 2008

In a sign that Democrat Barack Obama will be competitive in the nation's largest swing state, he is beating Republican John McCain comfortably in South Florida and has a slight edge among Hispanics, according to a new Miami Herald poll.

Obama is ahead 46-30 percent over McCain in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties in the survey of 807 people conducted by Zogby International. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

''Obama's 16-point lead in South Florida could springboard him to make it a competitive race statewide,'' said pollster John Zogby. ``I really think Florida is in play.''

About 24 percent of South Floridians favors another candidate or haven't made up their minds -- a large group that could tip the race in the coming months.

Obama was perceived as being behind in Florida because he did not campaign in the state for nine months and lost the Democratic primary to Hillary Clinton. But two statewide polls released last week showed him with a narrow edge over McCain. The Zogby poll was conducted June 18-20, just as Obama's first television ads in South Florida went on the air.

South Florida traditionally votes Democratic, but Obama's lead in Miami-Dade is wider than the narrow margin of victory posted by 2004 Democratic nominee John Kerry.

Among Hispanics in the three counties, Obama leads McCain 40 to 35 percent. Until the tide started to turn against the Republican Party in 2006, Hispanics in Florida have long favored the GOP.

''That shows the depth of anger that Hispanics are feeling toward the Republican Party,'' Zogby said. ``If Democrats walk away with 65 percent of the Hispanic vote in Florida, that will be almost insurmountable for the Republican party.''

Obama's lead in the poll suggests he is winning over supporters of Hillary Clinton, who won handily in South Florida and in the Hispanic community in the Jan. 29 presidential primary. McCain won the Hispanic vote in the Republican primary.

''When Hispanic voters have an opportunity to focus on McCain's record on issues like education, economic development, free trade and immigration, the candidate who best represents the Hispanic community is McCain,'' said Ana Carbonell, a Miami member of the McCain campaign's steering committee. ``The campaign plans an aggressive effort to reach out to Hispanic voters, especially in Florida.''

But Democrats point to signs that the Hispanic community's political stripes are changing. A protest Saturday outside Obama's speech in Miami drew only about three dozen people, mostly older Cuban-Americans. The group attacked Obama for surrounding himself with two high-level advisors who helped send Cuban rafter Elián González back to his father in Cuba.

When the custody battle raged eight years ago, Cuban-Americans rose up in droves. ''We understand the Elián González issue is something that passed, and that it was not Obama's fault,'' said Ramón Saúl Sánchez of the Miami-based Democracy Movement, who tussled with the federal agents who seized Elián from his relatives' home in Little Havana. ``People are giving more weight to other issues, like lifting the travel ban.''

Carbonell said younger Cuban-Americans may not have attended the protest but were buzzing about Obama's advisors on Spanish-language blogs. Of the Cuban-Americans in the Herald poll, a majority support McCain.

Obama has called for lifting the Bush administration's restrictions on Cuban-Americans who want to visit family on the island. McCain has criticized Obama for wanting to ease sanctions and for his willingness to meet with the Cuban government in the hope of sparking democratic reform.

''A lot of Cuban Americans are very disappointed with President Bush,'' Sanchez said. ``If McCain says he's going to follow the same policies as Bush, that says a lot.''

The survey also showed Obama leading among independents voters by 33-20 percent, with the rest favoring other candidates or undecided. Both Obama and McCain received strong support from independent voters in the primaries.

Obama's three-day swing through Florida last month helped him take in nearly $1.6 million in May -- more than twice what he raised statewide in April, according to reports filed last week with the Federal Election Commission. McCain collected $1.4 million in May, compared to nearly $1.1 million in April.

Miami Herald staff writer Rob Barry contributed to this report.



http://www.miamiherald.com/campaign08/story/580609.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Poll:Gallup
Tracking:
06/23 - 06/25
Obama: 44
McCain: 44
Spread: Tie


Poll: Rasmussen
Tracking:
06/23 - 06/25
Obama: 49
McCain: 45
Spread: Obama +4.0

Poll: LA Times/Bloomberg
Date: 06/19 - 06/23
Obama:49
McCain: 37
Spread: Obama +12.0

Poll: Franklin & Marshall
Date:
06/16 - 06/22 1501
Obama: 42
McCain: 36
Spread: Obama +6.0

Poll: Newsweek
Date:
06/18 - 06/19
Obama: 51
McCain: 36
Spread: Obama +15.0

FOX News
Date:
06/17 - 06/18
Obama: 45
Obma: 41
Soread: Obama +4.0

Poll: USA Today/Gallup
Date:
06/15 - 06/19
Obama: 50
McCain: 44
Spread: Obama +6.0

<font size="4">The Real Clear Politics Average
(RCP Average) of the polls above:</font size>
Date: June 15, 2008 through June 25, 2008
Obama: 47.1
McCain: 40.4
Spread: Obama +6.7


http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/us/general_election_mccain_vs_obama-225.html
 

monsterman

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
as each day goes by, I think this will be a blowout

It should be, but I'm a lil fearful. :hmm: Something doesn't seem right here. I still having a hard time understanding how McCain became the lead Repub candidate. It seems that the US is mostly pro repub and most of the supporters have a ride or die attitude with the Reds and will vote McCain regardless of anything.
 
Last edited:

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
MM,

The closer you look; the more you actually study (as opposed to just listening to the bullshit others often spew); the more you are likely to be surprised by what you might find.

QueEx
 

monsterman

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Yeah I know ppl out there are spiting bullshit. I'm just saying I do not want to see a part 2 of '04. If McBush somehow does wins, I think a few ppl might seriously jump off a building.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
If McBush somehow does wins, I think a few ppl might seriously jump off a building.
Lets hope (1) that McCain does not win; and (2) that if he doesn't, those who consider jumping are not themselves guilty of failing to do their part.

QueEx
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">

General Election: McCain vs. Obama
June 19, 2008 through July 6, 2008</font size>



Poll: Gallup
Daate:
07/02 - 07/05
Obama: 48
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +6.0


Poll:Rasmussen
Date:
07/02 - 07/06 3000
Obama: 49
McCain: 44
Spread: Obama +5.0


Poll: CNN
Date:
06/26 - 06/29
Obama: 50
McCain: 45
Spread: Obama +5.0


Poll: Democracy Corps (D)
Date:
06/22 - 06/25
Obama: 49
McCain: 45
Spread: Obama +4.0


Poll: Time
Date:
06/19 - 06/25
Obama: 47
McCain: 43
Spread" Obama +4.0


Poll: LA Times/Bloomberg
Date:
06/19 - 06/23
Obama: 49
McCain: 37
Spread: Obama +12.0


<font size="4">The Real Clear Politics Average
(RCP Average) of the polls above:</font size>

Date: 06/19 - 07/06
Obama: 48.7
McCain: 42.7
Spread: Obama +6.0

 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<IFRAME SRC="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/postpoll_071408.html" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/postpoll_071408.html">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4"><center>

July 15, 2008 -

Women, Blacks Give Obama 9 - Point Lead Over McCain,
Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds; Men Are Split
And Whites Tip To Republican

</font size></center>


<IFRAME SRC="http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1295.xml?ReleaseID=1192" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1295.xml?ReleaseID=1192">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

VegasGuy

Star
OG Investor
Don't pop your corks yet but Fixnews got to be pissed

WASHINGTON (AFP) - A majority of Americans believe that Democratic candidate Barack Obama will win the presidential election against Republican hopeful John McCain in November, a Fox News poll showed Thursday.

While 51 percent say Obama, who is vying to become the first African American president, will win the election, only 27 percent are betting on a McCain victory.

Voters registered as Democrats are more confident about their candidate's chances than their Republican peers: 71 percent of Democrats see Obama winning on November 4 while 51 percent of Republicans believe McCain will win.

One in four Republicans think that Obama, a senator from Illinois, will succeed US President George W. Bush.

A month ago, 47 percent of Americans believed that Obama, 46, would win the election compared to 32 percent for McCain, a 71-year-old Arizona senator.

Even though many Americans are predicting an Obama victory, the race remains tight.

In a head-to-head matchup, Obama leads McCain 41 to 40 percent among registered voters, the poll showed. If Libertarian candidate Bob Barr and independent hopeful Ralph Nader are added, Obama leads McCain by 40 to 37 percent.

If Obama chooses former Democratic nomination rival Hillary Clinton as his running mate and McCain picks former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, a former Republican candidate, the Democratic ticket leads 48 to 39 percent.

The survey was conducted between July 22-23 among 900 voters. The margin of error is plus or minus three percentage points.

While the race remains close, Obama is struggling to convince many Americans of his commander-in-chief mettle after serving in the US Senate for only three years.

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll out Wednesday showed that 55 percent of Americans believe Obama would be the riskier choice for the presidency compared to 35 percent for McCain, a Vietnam war veteran.

When asked about the poll, Obama told NBC television Thursday: "I do understand it. I'm new to the scene."

"John McCain's been around 25, 30 years in public life. I have just recently emerged in terms of our national politics. And so it's not surprising that people would say that the guy we're more familiar with is the less riskier choice," he said.

"That doesn't answer the broader question, though, which is what do Americans think we need right now?"

Another poll released Thursday by Quinnipiac University Polling Institute showed McCain had cut Obama's lead in the key battleground states of Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, and overtaken Obama in voter support in Colorado.

"It's been a good month for McCain. His movement in these key states, not large except for Minnesota, jibes with the tightening we are seeing in the national polls," said Peter Brown, the institute's assistant director.

"The good news for McCain is that he has improved his standing in Colorado and Michigan, two states that are critical to each man's strategy," Brown said.

McCain led Obama by 46 percent to 44 percent in Colorado, the survey conducted last week of some 1,400 people in the mountainous state showed. The margin of error was 2.6 percent.

In June, Obama led McCain by 49 percent to 44 percent in Colorado, traditionally a Republican state.

In Michigan, Obama also saw a couple of percentage points shaved off his voter-support tally, which fell from 48 percent in June to 46 percent this month. McCain held steady at 42 percent. The margin of error in that state's poll was 2.4 percent.

And in Minnesota, McCain surged ahead -- from 37 percent in June to 44 percent -- while Obama fell back from 54 percent to 46 percent, Quinnipiac said. Minnesota's margin of error was 2.8 percent.

Another poll by the Pew Research Center found that two-thirds of Hispanic voters support Obama for the White House, while less than one quarter back McCain.

The findings marked a positive turn for Obama's fortunes with Latinos: he lost the Hispanic vote in the Democratic primaries to Clinton by nearly two-to-one, Pew noted.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080725/ts_alt_afp/usvoteobamamccain_080725013635

-VG
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Don't pop your corks yet but Fixnews got to be pissed

You're right, LOL, not only am I not popping the cork, I'm not breaking the bottle out, yet.

If I understand it correctly, the French press survey is more concerned with which <u>candidate</u> people <u>think will win</u> -- as opposed to which <u>candidate</u> registered voters were likely to <u>vote for</u>.

QueEx
 

VegasGuy

Star
OG Investor
Breaking News: McCain's was right. The surge is working!

BREAKING: Barack SURGING (Plus 9) ☺☺ (DKos After Dark Edition)
by Al Rodgers
Sun Jul 27, 2008 at 10:27:56 AM PDT

WHAT A WAY TO CAP THE WEEK

The latest Gallup Daily Tracking poll has just rolled out, and Barack has increased his lead for the third straight day, stretching his lead to 49% - 40%. (Source) Gallup

GallupGraph.jpg


-VG
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Breaking News: McCain's was right. The surge is working!

BREAKING: Barack SURGING (Plus 9) ☺☺ (DKos After Dark Edition)
by Al Rodgers
Sun Jul 27, 2008 at 10:27:56 AM PDT

WHAT A WAY TO CAP THE WEEK

The latest Gallup Daily Tracking poll has just rolled out, and Barack has increased his lead for the third straight day, stretching his lead to 49% - 40%. (Source) Gallup

GallupGraph.jpg


-VG
Good news! Thanks VG

QueEx
 

dasmybikepunk

Wait for it.....
OG Investor
Re: Breaking News: McCain's was right. The surge is working!

Naw that's just an Illusion.. A figment even..


:lol::lol::lol:...and Hillary still has a chance to get those delegates:D


It's a wrap but it's also in the plan too go Barrack but America wake up too;)
 

kenbgco68

Rising Star
Registered
Re: Breaking News: McCain's was right. The surge is working!

good news, but keep your eye on them voting machines...
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">

General Election: McCain vs. Obama
July 21, 2008 through August 3, 2008</font size>




Poll: Gallup Tracking
Date: 08/01 - 08/03
Obama: 46
McCain: 43
Spread: Obama +3.0


Poll: Rasmussen Tracking
Date: 08/01 - 08/03
Obama: 46
McCain: 47
Spread: McCain +1.0


Poll: CNN
Date: 07/27 - 07/29
Obama: 51
McCain: 44
Spread: Obama +7.0


Poll: USA Today/Gallup
Date:
07/25 - 07/27
Obama: 45
McCain: 49
Spread: McCain +4.0

Pew Research
Date:
07/23 - 07/27
Obama: 47
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +5.0


Poll: Democracy Corps (D)
Date:
07/21 - 07/24
Obama: 50
McCain: 45
Spread: Obama +5.0


FOX News
Date:
07/22 - 07/23
Obama: 41
McCain: 40
Spread: Obama +1.0




<font size="4">The Real Clear Politics Average
(RCP Average) of the polls above:</font size>

Date: 07/21 - 08/03
Obama: 46.6
McCain: 44.3
Spread: Obama +2.3



 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
be careful in how you are looking at these polls. It is August, and now McCain is actually running a campaign that the Republicans can rally too. Not to mention, no one has selected a VP candidate yet. Obama needs to find a way to break out of the 40's if he wants to beat McCain. As long as it stay close, the more chance McCain will beat Obama.
 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
there was always the chance that mccain could've win against obama, the dem party didn't care. the party might be in chaos come nov. hell they can't even pay their convention bills.

my point is, obama can win if he can break out this tightness right now. If not, McCain is going to destroy him....
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Why polls aren't worrying Obama's team </font size></center>

August 10, 2008
Chicago Sun-Times
BY: CAROL MARIN
cmarin@suntimes.com

Finally, for John McCain, a week to smile about. "Obama fatigue," a virus that's afflicted the GOP presidential candidate for sometime now, was discovered in a new Pew survey to have spread to 48 percent of the populace.

And recent national polls now place McCain and Barack Obama in a statistical dead heat. Gallup's numbers have Obama 46, McCain 43.

RealClearPolitics' national average is about the same, Obama 46.9 to McCain 43.3.

What does it mean? Next to nothing. And Obama's team not only knows it, it thrives on it.

They think "horse race" in the classic Seabiscuit sense.

Out of the gate, the thoroughbred who leads too early and by too great a margin is more often than not the vulnerable one, the one in danger of losing it all to the horse who strategically holds back, waits, and then thunders in the final furlongs to finish first.

Obama's political guru, David Axelrod, and his Chicago-based firm, AKP&D lay it out on their Web site. "We win tough races. . . . campaigns no one thought could be won," it states. "The governor who came from 20 points behind" . . . (Iowa's Tom Vilsack). "The incumbent mayor who came back from 20 points down in only 20 days" . . . (Deedee Corradini in Salt Lake City)

"The congresswoman who won Dan Quayle's old seat in an upset" . . . (Indiana's Jill Long).

Axelrod & Co. can now include in its victory list the skinny unknown from Chicago who in one short year went from a mere 26 percent in the polls to toppling front-runner Hillary Clinton who was a full 22 points ahead of him last August.

"The national numbers mean nothing," said John Kupper, the "K" in AKP&D, last week by phone. "These are not national elections but state by state elections. We have vote goals. We know prior performance models."

In other words, this is now and always has been the sum of political component parts for the Obama operation, not a national popular election but a sophisticated, incremental accumulation of delegates in the primary, and electoral votes come November.

It isn't that Axelrod's team has had no experience losing. Their most recent defeat came in 2006 and it stung. The candidate, Tammy Duckworth, was a charismatic Iraq war veteran, a pilot who lost both legs when her helicopter was shot down. Though Duckworth and AKP&D had a corner on charisma and a lot of cash, they failed to wrest U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde's former seat from Republican control.

Obama can certainly lose this race. But McCain's going to have to find a better way to win it than by invoking Paris Hilton or by sniping in his most recent ad how "life in the spotlight must be grand but for the rest of us, times are tough."

What's tough for McCain is that despite having had a practice run at the presidency once before, it didn't limber him up, cause him to realize that even the elderly now skillfully navigate the Internet or help him craft a "vision thing."

In the short run, jealous jabs at Obama for having too much face time on the covers of Rolling Stone and GQ may appear to close the gap in national polls. But the aggregation of images -- Obama in Germany, Obama with his cute girls and beautiful wife, Obama visiting his grandmother in Hawaii -- is by dribs and drabs helping America feel familiar with him, visualize him on foreign soil, and see him, perhaps, as both human and presidential.

In some ways the tightening numbers work for Obama, not against him.

"No cause for panic," said Kupper. No, indeed, he's off to splash in the Pacific surf with his family.

It's the horse race play. Or, as the Axelrod game goes, you always play the come from behind, even when you're ahead.


http://www.suntimes.com/news/marin/1099400,CST-EDT-carol10.article
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>McCain Closes Gap on Obama
In Poll as Conventions Loom</font size></center>


The Wall Street Journal
By LAURA MECKLER
August 21, 2008; Page A1

WASHINGTON -- Sen. John McCain has all but closed the gap with Sen. Barack Obama, underscoring how international crises -- and some well-placed negative ads -- have boosted the prospects of the Republican presidential candidate.

A Wall Street Journal/NBC poll also points to a big challenge for Sen. Obama as his party gathers in Denver next week for its convention: rallying Sen. Hillary Clinton's supporters to his cause. Only half of those who voted for Sen. Clinton in the primaries say they are now supporting Sen. Obama. One in five is supporting Sen. McCain. The Republican has reached out to Clinton supporters by offering steady praise for the former first lady and hinting that he'd be open to a running mate who supports abortion rights.

Overall, the poll finds the race a statistical dead heat, with 45% favoring Sen. Obama and 42% Sen. McCain. That three-point Obama advantage is down from six points a month ago, a trend found in other national polls as well. The poll's margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, meaning the Obama lead could range from zero to six points.

The poll has some cautionary notes for Sen. McCain as well. It shows that his supporters are much less enthusiastic than Sen. Obama's, and finds widespread concern among voters about his age.

But his performance is impressive given the built-in advantages Democrats enjoy this year, including President George W. Bush's unpopularity and the weak economy. Sen. McCain got off to a slow start after sealing his party's nomination in February. His operation and fund raising have lagged behind Sen. Obama's. In June and July -- the two months since Sen. Obama captured his nomination and the head-to-head race began -- the Democrat has outraised his rival $105 million to $49 million and outspent him $82 million to $59 million.

Nonetheless, Sen. McCain has managed to keep the race close. "The poll shows how wrong the Washington conventional wisdom has been on this race," said Steve Schmidt, a senior McCain strategist.

Mr. Schmidt is partly responsible for the campaign's more aggressive approach recently. It unleashed a barrage of attack ads painting Sen. Obama as a celebrity who is not ready to lead, capitalizing on voter doubts about his ability to be commander in chief. The first ad, released three weeks ago, compared the Democrat to lightweight stars Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. That prompted a storm of news media attention and even a response video from Ms. Hilton. The result: For the first time in a long time, Sen. McCain was controlling the conversation.

Voters noticed. Three in 10 in the new poll say only Sen. McCain is running a "negative campaign," versus just 5% who say the same about Sen. Obama. Still, this doesn't seem to be hurting Sen. McCain, reinforcing the notion that in politics, attacks work. Typically, pollsters say, when one side is seen as negative, both are. This poll found just one in five saying both candidates are running negative campaigns.

Sen. McCain has also found two winning issues in the past month. In response to high gasoline prices, he seized on a proposal that proved resonant with voters: expanding oil drilling offshore. Then, an international crisis -- Russian troops entering Georgia -- played to his greatest strength and reminded voters of dangers abroad. The new poll was in the field from Aug. 15-18, after the Georgian conflict broke out. By 52% to 27%, voters said Sen. McCain would be better than Sen. Obama on "international crises such as Iran or Russia and the nation of Georgia."

The McCain campaign has been limiting the candidate's exposure to the national press, cutting back formal news conferences and eliminating the more open-ended conversations on his campaign bus that represented his signature style. The goal: Keep Sen. McCain, who is known for riffing on any topic, from moving off the agreed-upon message of the day.


Lost Momentum

At the same time, Sen. Obama's campaign seems to have uncharacteristically lost its stride. While his high-profile trip abroad in late July drew enormous crowds and press coverage, it may have backfired at home. A recent poll by the Pew Research Center for People & the Press found half of voters had heard too much about him lately.

"Whatever momentum Obama took into the summer, he really appears to have lost," said Neil Newhouse, a Republican pollster who conducts the poll with Democrat Peter D. Hart. "It's as if his campaign has stalled a little bit or coasted."

Obama aides say they aren't panicking, or shifting strategy. But the campaign has turned more sharply negative in recent days, in the candidate's comments on the stump and in his television ads. He released one Wednesday accusing Sen. McCain of pulling his punches investigating the scandal of disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, with the closing line: "For 26 years in Washington, John McCain's played the same old games. We just can't afford more of the same."


P1-AM653_Poll1_20080820193045.jpg

Sen. John McCain shown Wednesday in New Mexico
Associated Press Photo


Sen. Obama has a big opportunity to regain his momentum over the next week, when he announces his choice for vice president and Democrats gather for their national convention. On the final night, 75,000 people are expected to gather at a stadium in Denver to watch Sen. Obama accept the nomination, with millions more watching on television and the Internet.

"We're going to come out of our convention even more unified than we are right now, ready to take on John McCain in the fall," said Obama spokesman Bill Burton.

Despite Sen. McCain's progress in this poll, there were signs of problems as well. Nearly four in 10 voters say they are concerned that Sen. McCain, who turns 72 next week, is too old to assume the office. And when the poll gave voters the opportunity to choose among third-party candidates Ralph Nader and Bob Barr, in addition to the two major-party candidates, a small portion did just that, most of them coming from Sen. McCain's column. In a four-way race, Sen. Obama keeps 95% of his supporters while Sen. McCain keeps just 90% of his, a sign that some of the McCain voters are simply supporting him because they don't like the alternative.

"I honestly don't feel that Obama has been in politics long enough to be running our country," said Misti Love, 27, of Rossville, Ga., who stays home with her three children. A political independent, she said she would support Sen. McCain in a two-way race but Mr. Nader, a longtime consumer activist, if he were on the ballot. As for Sen. Obama: "That is my last choice."

Sen. Obama's campaign faces a critical task in Denver: bringing Sen. Clinton's supporters to his side. Among all voters, 11% say both that they would vote for Sen. Clinton if she were running against Sen. McCain and that they aren't ready to back Sen. Obama against the Republican.


P1-AM652_Poll_20080820175705.jpg

Sen. Barack Obama in Virginia
Getty Images


These voters seem like natural Obama backers: They are not happy with the direction of the country, they don't like President Bush, and they want Congress to be controlled by Democrats. Ideologically, they are liberal or moderate. Demographically, they tend to be female with incomes below $50,000 -- two groups that lean Democratic.

Yet people in this group view Sen. McCain more favorably than they view Sen. Obama, and they are uncomfortable with the idea of Sen. Obama in the White House. One in three sees Sen. Obama as "arrogant and cocky," an image the McCain campaign has aggressively tried to create for him over the past month.

These disaffected Democrats could make a difference in big states where Sen. Clinton did well, including Ohio and Pennsylvania. Sen. McCain is reaching out to them with a coalition called "Citizens for McCain" led by Sen. Joe Lieberman, who describes himself as an independent Democrat. Sen. McCain himself tries to encourage Democrats by talking about his bipartisan successes.

In gestures to Clinton voters, Sen. Obama has agreed to have Sen. Clinton's name put into nomination, and she will deliver a prime-time address.

"The Democratic convention is more than a coronation," said Mr. Hart, the Democratic pollster. "The Hillary Clinton campaign may be over but the Clinton factor remains very much a part of the election."


20-20 Hindsight

Mr. Burton, the Obama spokesman, said the campaign is working closely with the Clinton camp and said the party is largely united. He pointed to another finding in the poll that he said showed Democrats nearly as unified as Republicans: that 79% of Democrats are supporting Sen. Obama, versus 85% of Republicans who are supporting Sen. McCain.

"Do we still have work to do with folks who supported Hillary Clinton? Absolutely, but we've been able to make great strides," Mr. Burton said.

It won't be easy, Mr. Newhouse, the Republican pollster, said: "They've already voted once against Barack Obama and right now, after three months of 20-20 hindsight, they're still not voting for Barack Obama."

Overall, Sen. Obama continues to have big leads among young voters and Hispanics. Sen. McCain is favored by older voters and regular churchgoers.

The poll has other bits of good news for Sen. McCain and his party. For months, independent voters leaned Democratic on a number of measures. This month's survey found them more up for grabs.

Sen. McCain appears to be steadily gaining some traction with the electorate. The portion of people who view him positively has inched up from 39% in June to 42% in July to 45% in August.

The gap between the percentage of voters who view the Republican Party negatively and those who view it positively has shrunk considerably. In April, 27% had a positive view and 48% had a negative view -- a 21 point gap. This month, that gap was down to 7 points.

The Arizona senator capitalized on his advantage on foreign policy over the past couple weeks, as crisis broke out in Georgia. That same day, he issued a strong statement before cameras blaming Russia for the conflict. He kept it up, speaking daily about the conflict and emphasizing his knowledge of the region. An adviser said he had even been jet-skiing with Georgia president Mikheil Saakashvili, and the candidate called him by his nickname, Misha.

One unknown is how Sen. Obama's race will affect voters. Digging into the data, Mr. Hart found 11% of voters who are white and whose answers to at least two questions suggest that race is important to them. The vast majority of these people are reliable Republicans in the McCain camp, he said.

He estimates that 1% to 2% of the electorate may be voters who might vote for Sen. Obama if he weren't black.

Write to Laura Meckler at laura.meckler@wsj.com

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB121926582869857905.html?mod=special_page_campaign2008_topbox
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">

General Election: McCain vs. Obama
August 10, 2008 through August 20, 2008</font size>




CBS News/NY Times
Date:
08/15 - 08/19 869
Obama: 45
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +3


NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl
Date:
08/15 - 08/18
Obama: 45
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +3


LA Times/Bloomberg
Date:
08/15 - 08/18
Obama: 45
McCain: 43
Spread: Obama +2


Reuters/Zogby
Date:
08/14 - 08/16
Obama: 41
McCain: 46
Spread: McCain +5


Rasmussen Tracking
Date:
08/18 - 08/20
{b]Obama:
48
McCain: 46
Spread: Obama +2


Gallup Tracking
Date:
08/17 - 08/19
Obama: 45
McCain: 43
Spread: Obama +2


Quinnipiac
Date:
08/12 - 08/17
Obama: 47
McCain: 42
Spread: Obama +5


Battleground
Date: 08/10 - 08/14
Obama: 46
McCain: 47
Spread: McCain +1




<font size="4">The Real Clear Politics Average
(RCP Average) of the polls above:</font size>

Date: 08/10 - 08/20
Obama: 45.3
McCain: 43.9
Spread: Obama +1.4



 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>McCain has big lead in South,
poll of 11 states shows</font size></center>




By Roddie Burris | The State
Friday, August 22, 2008

Republican U.S. Sen. John McCain enjoys a 16-point lead — 51 percent to 35 percent — among Southern voters over rival Democratic U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, a new poll by Winthrop University and ETV shows.

And, the further into the South you go, the larger McCain's lead grows, the poll of likely voters in 11 Southern states shows.

Likely voters in the Deep South — those in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and South Carolina — preferred McCain by a 25-point margin, 56 percent to 31 percent.

Southern voters said what they want most in a president is honesty, experience and shared values. Southern voters rated McCain ahead of Obama in each of those categories.

McCain's strongest support comes from white working-class Southerners — who favor him by a 34-point margin — and white evangelicals — who favor the Arizonan by 54 percentage points.

The poll, which was conducted Aug. 1-17, has a margin of error of (plus or minus) 2.97 percentage points.

While political pundits have made much of Obama and Democrats trying to win over a Southern state or two from the Republicans in November, the Winthrop/ETV poll shows that will prove difficult.

"It’s about keeping John McCain from sweeping the South. That's the key," said Scott Huffmon, associate professor of political science at Winthrop and director of the Winthrop/ETV Poll.

Rather than attempting to contest the presidential race across the South, a wiser strategy for Obama would be to concentrate on the closely contested Southern states, Huffmon said. "You cannot fight a regional battle anymore."

Individual state-by-state polls have shown Obama within striking distance of McCain in Virginia, North Carolina, Florida and Georgia.

On the issues, McCain trumped Obama nearly across the board in the poll.

The economy easily was the most important issue to Southern voters in the upcoming presidential election. McCain bested Obama on which candidate would handle energy and gas prices better, and who would do the better job on taxes.

McCain also far out-distanced Obama on who would do a better job of handling the Iraq war and terrorism.

None of that surprised Jeanette Smith of Chapin, who described McCain as honest and decisive, strong on national security and unlikely to be manipulated by a foreign government.

"The economy and national security are neck-and-neck for me," said Smith, a 54-year-old bookkeeper and mother of four. "In fact, I'm not even sure they are separate issues."

On illegal immigration, sometimes an Achilles' heel for McCain, and moral values, the four-term senior senator from Arizona again stood taller with Southern voters than Obama.

“Illegal immigration needs to be controlled,” said 76-year-old Evelyn Perry of Fort Mill, who was among those surveyed. “I just haven’t really understood what (McCain’s position) is on that — but it needs to be controlled.”

Even without those specifics, Perry said she trusts McCain more. "Overall, I just think McCain understands better."

However, in a glimmer of hope for the Democratic nominee-to-be, more likely Southern voters polled said Obama "understands the problems Americans face in their daily lives" better than McCain does.

However, Deep South and working-class white voters disagreed, saying McCain understands them best.

"Senator Obama has a great deal of work to do if he plans to turn the Southern states in his favor," said Adolphus Belk Jr., who helped design the poll and teaches political science and African-American Studies at Winthrop.

Belk said Obama has to do a better job at defining himself for voters, moving beyond simply being a new face on the national stage. Obama also has to overcome religious and ethnic misinformation that continues to plague his candidacy, Belk said.

That's no short order in the South, either, said Obama supporter John Hines Jr. of Effingham, S.C. "For older Americans, I think color is still an issue," said the 53-year-old paper maker.

Of those polled, 86 percent said race would not be an important factor in how they choose to vote. However, a quarter of all likely Southern voters surveyed said that if a candidate had a Muslim parent, it would impact their votes. Obama, who is a Christian, had a Muslim father.

Hines said he thinks race matters despite the poll results.

"I hate to knock on the color thing, I really do," said Hines, a native South Carolinian. "But I think it’s a factor."

Still, Hines also had kind words for McCain. "I really think whoever is elected, it will be good for America," he said.

Obama supporter Willie Greene, 50, of Patrick, S.C., said the Democrat has to focus on pocketbook issues, and be more assertive and less contemplative in responding to questions.

<font size="3">"Right now, they're seeing color," said Greene, a treatment plant operator. "It's a big hurdle he would have to overcome, and I hate to say it, but he is at a big disadvantage in the South.”</font size>


http://www.mcclatchydc.com/100/story/49844.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5">
8 burning questions for Southerners</font size>


SOURCE: Winthrop/ETV Poll


Beyond finding Republican presidential nominee-to-be John McCain leading Democrat Barack Obama among likely Southern voters, the Winthrop University/ETV poll also offers insights into other issues in this year’s presidential race. A look at eight of those issues:

1. QUESTION: Will Hillary Clinton supporters back Obama?

ANSWER: Yes. After a bruising nominating fight, questions lingered about whether supporters of the U.S. senator from New York would support Obama. But more than 80 percent of self-identified Clinton supporters in the poll of likely Southern voters said they would vote for Obama.​

2. QUESTION: Does having a Southerner on the ticket matter?

ANSWER: No. Democrats have suggested Obama put a Southerner on the ticket to make him more competitive in the South. Some Republicans have suggested the same to draw religious conservatives to McCain. More than 70 percent of those polled said the vice presidential choice is important in helping them decide their vote. But almost nine in 10 said it makes no difference if the vice presidential candidate hails from the South.​

3. QUESTION: Will there be a Bush backlash for McCain?

ANSWER: There could be. Democrats have been painting a potential McCain administration as a third President Bush term. More than half of the Southerners polled say they are very or somewhat concerned McCain will continue Bush’s policies. More than 50 percent of those polled say they disapprove of the way Bush is handling his job as president and almost two-thirds think the country is headed in the wrong direction.​

4. QUESTION: What issue is most important among voters?

ANSWER: The economy. By a margin of almost 3-to-1 the Southerners polled chose the economy — 33 percent — over Iraq — 12 percent. The next most popular response, the price of gas, was cited by only 5.8 percent.​

5. QUESTION: bWho do Southern voters trust on the issues?

ANSWER: McCain is the choice — by double digits — to lead on the economy, the war in Iraq, taxes, illegal immigration and fighting terrorism. The candidates were judged almost even on health care.​

6. QUESTION: Does the South think Obama is an elitist?

ANSWER: Perhaps not. Talk during the Democratic presidential primary suggested some voters, especially white working-class voters, thought Obama an out-of-touch elitist. But, among the Southerners polled, Obama slightly bested McCain — 41.1 percent to 39.1 percent — as the candidate who understands the problems Americans face in their daily lives.​

7. QUESTION: Will race matter?

ANSWER: Three in 4 black Southerners polled said the race of the candidate did not matter to them. Among white Southerners polled, 80 percent said the race of the candidate either was “not very important” or “not at all important.”​

8. QUESTION: Will age matter?

ANSWER: It could. McCain is 72 on Aug. 29. When asked at what age would you say someone is too old to run for the presidency, about a third either said no age is too old or they weren’t sure what that age would be. The average age identified by those polled as “too old” was 74. The most common response was that 70 was too old.​

SOURCE: Winthrop/ETV Poll

http://www.thestate.com/politics/story/493989.html
 
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