Posted on 06/23/2004 5:22:33 PM PDT by Dales
The battlegrounds:
State | 2000 Result | Media Battleground | Current Status |
---|---|---|---|
New Jersey | Gore +16 | No | Kerry, Lean |
Iowa | Gore +0.3 | Yes | Kerry, Lean |
Michigan | Gore +5 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
Oregon | Gore +0.4 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
New Hampshire | Bush +1 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
Minnesota | Gore +2 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
Pennsylvania | Gore +4 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
West Virginia | Bush +6 | Yes | Kerry, Slight |
Wisconsin | Gore +0.2 | Yes | Tossup |
New Mexico | Gore +0.06 | Yes | Tossup |
Ohio | Bush +4 | Yes | Tossup |
Florida | Bush +0.01 | Yes | Bush, Slight |
Arkansas | Bush +5 | Yes | Bush, Slight |
Virginia | Bush +8 | No | Bush, Slight |
Nevada | Bush +4 | Yes | Bush, Lean |
Arizona | Bush +6 | Yes | Bush, Lean |
Missouri | Bush +3 | Yes | Bush, Lean |
The scoreboard:
ECB | Bush 203, Kerry 200 | Bush 249, Kerry 226 with tossups |
ECB Classic | Kerry 236, Bush 214 | Bush 285, Kerry 253 with tossups |
ECB Classic Sans Zogby Interactive | Bush 226, Kerry 204 | Bush 271, Kerry 263 with tossups |
Calculated National Result | Bush 45.2%, Kerry 44.2% |
For the trends, the changes in each are as follows:
ECB | Bush unchanged, Kerry +10 | With tossups: Bush +27, Kerry +5 |
ECB Classic | Bush +35, Kerry +28 | With tossups: Bush +73, Kerry -63 |
ECB Classic Sans Zogby Interactive | Bush +48, Kerry +4 | With tossups: Bush -9, Kerry +32 |
Calculated National Result | Bush -0.3%, Kerry -0.3% |
New Hampshire | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 4 | |
2000 Result | |
Bush 48% | |
Gore 47% |
Background: Clinton won twice here, and the second time would have been even without Perot. The first time, he likely would have lost. Johnson won here. Other than that, Republican wins back through Dewey beating Truman. The elder Bush crushed the man who Kerry was Lt. Governor for, Mike Dukakis.
Both last time and this time, New Hampshire started as a slight advantage for Bush. When looking at the other offices, it is hard to understand just why this state is not more firmly in his control. The Republicans hold all the House seats, both Senate seats, control both chambers of the state legislature, and hold all major executive branch offices, while having a 37%-26% registration advantage.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4/27/03 | Franklin Pierce College | Link | 600 RV | 4% | Bush | 42% | Unnamed Democrat | 42% | Even |
9/11/03 | American Research Group | Link | RV | 4% | Bush | 50% | Unnamed Democrat | 36% | Bush +14 |
10/16/03 | Research 2000 | Link | RV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 39% | Bush +12 |
12/10/03 | American Research Group | NA | RV | 4% | Bush | 50% | Unnamed Democrat | 38% | Bush +12 |
10/16/03 | Research 2000 | Link | RV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 39% | Bush +12 |
1/20/04 | Associated Press | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 55% | Kerry | 40% | Bush +15 |
2/20/04 | University of New Hampshire | Link | 511 LV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 53% | Kerry +15 |
3/18/04 | American Research Group | Link | 463 RV, Nader an option | 4.6% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 39% | Bush +6 |
3/18/04 | American Research Group | Link | 463 RV, Nader not an option | 4.6% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 45% | Bush +2 |
4/1/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV, Nader an option | 4% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +5 |
4/1/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV, Nader an option | 4% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 45% | Bush +3 |
4/22/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 4.5% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +2 |
4/26/04 | University of New Hampshire | Link | 491 LV | 4.4% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +4 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.3% | Bush | 39.9% | Kerry | 49.5% | Kerry +9.6 |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.4% | Bush | 44.4% | Kerry | 48.7% | Kerry +4.3 |
6/9/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 46% | Push |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.4% | Bush | 42.9% | Kerry | 46.2% | Bush +3.3% |
Punditry: The new poll says Tossup, but it is a step backwards for Bush in an apples to apples comparison to the previous ARG poll, and as such I maintain New Hampshire as having a Slight Advantage for Kerry. ARG did not give a breakdown for the sans Nader question this time, but he already had negligible support so that is a non-issue to me.
Addendum: A frequent visitor to here writes:
I totally don't understand your NH logic. I think it should be a toss up. If you throw out the Zogby polls, there's only 1 poll which shows Kerry with a lead outside the MoE, possible, if +4 counts, and that poll, if I understood you, was one which is questionable. Here you have a poll to counter that one, which doesn't have a questionable methodology, and is 6 weeks more recent. So you're keeping NH as slightly Kerry based sole on one poll which has a flawed methodology and is 6 weeks old.Let me expand upon my logic.I also don't understand the relevance of the ARG poll being a push vs. having Bush ahead by 2 or 3 earlier.
When I look at New Hampshire, the previous three polls to the American Research Group poll I just added are a UNH poll showing Kerry leading (but within even a single span of the MoE-- remember to be outside the MoE it has to be a lead beyond two spans), a Rasmussen poll also showing Kerry leading (but well within a single span), and an earlier ARG poll showing Bush ahead.
So with the new ARG poll in, it would show two polls indicating a slight Kerry advantage and one showing a complete deadlock. That would cause me to think immediately "slight advantage for Kerry". Throw in on top of it that previously ARG had Bush up slightly and now has it tied, which means that they are showing a small (perhaps insignificant, perhaps not) move towards Kerry, and that is another indication to me that the slight advantage Kerry designation is the way to go.
But I do want to make things clear on one thing-- when it comes to the difference between the two slight advantage designations and the tossup designation, I do not personally see them as being different in a meaningful sense. It is my belief that all three of these designations mean that the state has a 50% chance of going to either candidate. This is based off of a review of how those designations played out in the 2000 election.
Illinois | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 21 | |
2000 Result | |
Gore 55% | |
Bush 42% |
Background: Before Clinton broke through, Republicans had won six straight Presidential contests in Illinois. But Clinton's win against Bush was not because of Perot; he would have carried it without him in the race. And Gore flat out spanked Bush here.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6/9/03 | Chicago Tribune | NA | RV | 3.8% | Bush | 38% | Unnamed Democrat | 36% | Bush +2 |
10/20/03 | Chicago Tribune | NA | 700 RV | 3.8% | Bush | 38% | Unnamed Democrat | 49% | Dem +11 |
1/9/04 | Chicago Tribune | Link | RV | 3.8% | Bush | 40% | Unnamed Democrat | 48% | Dem +8 |
3/3/04 | Research 2000 | Link | 500 LV | 5% | Bush | 36% | Kerry | 54% | Kerry +18 |
3/3/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 1500 LV | 3% | Bush | 39% | Kerry | 52% | Kerry +15 |
3/13/04 | Copley News Service/Mason-Dixon | Link | 625 LV | 4% | Bush | 39% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +8 |
5/12/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 4.5% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 48% | Kerry +5 |
5/24/04 | Market Shares Corp. | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 54% | Kerry +16 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 54% | Kerry +16 |
6/9/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 742 LV | 4% | Bush | 39% | Kerry | 52% | Kerry +13 |
Punditry: Still Strong Advantage for Kerry. I am surprised by the Senate portion of this poll which shows Jack Ryan within 11 points of Obama, which is much closer for him than I would have anticipated at this stage of the race. Illinois is another state where more of Kerry's support is anti-Bush (61%) than for him (38%) and again by almost a 2-1 ratio. As I have pointed out several times, this is normally an indication of trouble for a candidate as the only two candidates in recent elections to have more of their support come from those against their opponent were Michael Dukakis and Bob Dole. Given that this was a media-sponsored poll, I am surprised that question was asked at all.
Pennsylvania | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 21 | |
2000 Result | |
Gore 51% | |
Bush 46% |
Background: Democrats have won this state 6 of the last 10 elections, with the first of Clinton's wins being attributable to Ross Perot being on the ballot (19%). Typically, the races in the Keystone state have been close. Pennsylvania started as leaning Bush last time, but has drifted to where it has a slight advantage for the Democrats. Republicans hold a 12-7 advantage in the numbers of Representatives, and hold both Senate seats. They also hold both chambers of the state legislature. The Democrats hold the major executive branch positions except for Attorney General, and have a significant registration advantage (48%-42%).
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5/13/03 | Quinnipiac | Link | 952 RV | 3.2% | Bush | 56% | Kerry | 34% | Bush +22 |
10/9/03 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,116 RV | 3% | Bush | 50% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +7 |
11/23/03 | Muhlenberg College | Link | 430 RV | 4.7% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 40% | Bush +7 |
12/14/03 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,092 RV | 3% | Bush | 50% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +8 |
2/18/04 | Quinnipiac | Ling | 1,356 RV | 2.7% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 50% | Dem +5 |
2/22/04 | Keystone Poll | Link | 392 RV | 4.9% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 47% | Dem +1 |
3/?/04 | Muhlenberg College | Link | RV | ?% | Bush | ?% | Kerry | ?% | Push |
3/3/04 | Pennsylvania Public Mind | Link | 1750 Adults | 2.4% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +2 |
3/11/04 | Survey USA | Link | 802 RV | 3.5% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +2 |
3/15/04 | Qunnipiac | Link | 1,022 RV (Nader not given as an option) | 3 | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 45% | Kerry +1 |
3/15/04 | Qunnipiac | Link | 1,022 RV (Nader given as an option) | 3% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 40% | Bush +4 |
3/16/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 4.5% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 45% | Kerry +1 |
3/29/04 | Keystone Poll | Link | 565 RV | 4.1% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 40% | Bush +6 |
4/19/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 769 RV, Nader not an option | 3.5% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +4 |
4/19/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 769 RV, Nader an option | 3.5% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 39% | Bush +6 |
4/25/04 | Pew Research | Link | 867 RV | 4% | Bush | 42% | Kerry | 42% | Push |
5/3/04 | Bennett, Petts, And Blumenthal (D) | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +6 |
5/7/04 | Susquehanna Polling (R) | Link | 650 LV | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +2 |
5/14/04 | Muhlenberg College | Link | 400 RV | 5% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 48% | Kerry +5 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3% | Bush | 42.6% | Kerry | 50.8% | Kerry +8.2 |
5/25/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 701 LV | 4% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 44% | Kerry +3 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 5% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +1 |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.6% | Bush | 44.9% | Kerry | 51.5% | Kerry +5.6 |
6/9/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 684 LV | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +1 |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.4% | Bush | 44.7% | Kerry | 51.7% | Kerry +4.0% |
Punditry: Last time, I wrote "Sometimes Bush is coming out ahead, sometimes Kerry is coming out ahead. That sounds just like a Tossup to me." Some things don't change. Pennsylvania is yet another state where by nearly a 2-1 margin, Kerry's support is more against Bush than for him.
F | Florida | ||
---|---|---|---|
Electoral Votes: 27 | |||
2000 Result | |||
Bush 48.85% | |||
Gore 48.84% |
Background: Despite the best efforts of the results-oriented Florida Supreme Court, Bush held on to win the state in 2000, just as every recount conducted afterwards validated. Did you know that since 1948, though, that only three times has Florida gone for the Democrat candidate? Johnson got 51%, Carter got 52%, and Clinton (2nd term) got 48% (with Perot taking 9%). More times than not, the Republican has come closer to 60%. Why Bush underperformed here to such a degree is something his campaign must rectify.
In the first ECB of 2000, Florida was listed as a battleground with a slight advantage to Gore. This time around, it is starting with a slight advantage for Bush. Florida has 6 Democrat Representatives and 18 Republicans. Both chambers of the state legislature are controlled by the Republicans. Republicans control most of the executive branch. However, both Senate seats are held by Democrats. As of Dec. 1, 2003, the state registration was 41.9% Democrat and 38.6% Republican.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4/29/03 | Mason-Dixon | Link | RV | 5% | Bush | 53% | Unnamed Democrat | 38% | Bush +15 |
12/3/03 | Schroth & Associates | Link | 800 RV | 3.5% | Bush | 43% | Unnamed Democrat | 37% | Bush +6 |
1/15/04 | Rasmussen Reports | Link | LV | 5% | Bush | 47% | Unnamed Democrat | 45% | Bush +2 |
2/27/04 | Research 2000 | Link | 500 LV | 4% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +5 |
3/4/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 45% | Kerry +1 |
3/4/04 | Schroth & Associates | Link | 800 RV | 3.5% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +6 |
3/14/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 400 LV | 5% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 48% | Kerry +3 |
4/1/04 | Mason-Dixon | Link | 625 RV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +8 |
4/13/04 | Rasmussen Reports | Link | 500 LV | 5% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +1 |
4/21/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 45% | Bush +1 |
5/9/04 | Hamilton, Beattie and Staff (D) | Link | 1000 LV | 3% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 50% | Kerry +3 |
5/19/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 46% | Bush +1 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.4% | Bush | 47.6% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +1.4 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 46% | Push |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 2.9% | Bush | 47.9% | Kerry | 49.5% | Kerry +1.6 |
6/14/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 723 LV | 4% | Bush | 50% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +7 |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 2.6% | Bush | 50.3% | Kerry | 46.1% | Bush +4.2% |
Punditry: If SurveyUSA is correct, then Bush has opened things up a tad in Florida. This would be the first evidence I have seen, and as such I will make the cautious redesignation as Slight Advantage for Bush rather than the "Leaning" designation which a 7 point lead would normally merit (especially when one candidate is at 50%).
As has been SurveyUSA's tendency of late, they asked if a candidate's supporters are "for" that candidate or "against" the other. Over 80% of Bush's support is for him, while less than 40% of Kerry's is for him. What happens to the "anti-Bush" voters after the convention will probably decide this election.
F | Maryland | ||
---|---|---|---|
Electoral Votes: 10 | |||
2000 Result | |||
Gore 57% | |||
Bush 40% |
Background: Since the 1960 election, the only Republicans to carry Maryland were Nixon for his re-elect, Reagan for his re-elect, and George H. W. Bush during his first campaign. Clinton did not need Perot to win here either time. This is a Democrat state.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1/12/04 | Potomac, Inc | Link | 1,200 LV | 2.8% | Bush | 41% | Unnamed Democrat | 51% | Dem +10 |
2/8/04 | Gonzalez | Link | 818 RV | 3.5% | Bush | 40% | Kerry | 51% | Kerry +11 |
2/27/04 | Mason-Dixon | Link | 625 LV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +9 |
3/24/04 | Gonzales Research and Marketing | Link | 825 LV | 4% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 48% | Kerry +5 |
6/9/04 | Gonzales Research and Marketing | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 52% | Kerry +14 |
Punditry: This is more what I expected from Maryland. Strong Advantage for Kerry. The lack of details in the poll writeup precludes any detailed analysis.
F | New York | ||
---|---|---|---|
Electoral Votes: 31 | |||
2000 Result | |||
Gore 60% | |||
Bush 35% |
Background: From 1960 onward, Republicans have carried the Empire State only three times. Nixon beat McGovern, Reagan beat Carter, and Reagan beat Mondale. Even Dukakis won here.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4/03 | Marist | Link | RV | 4% | Bush | 32% | Unnamed Democrat | 39% | Dem +7 |
9/23/03 | Marist | Link | RV | 4% | Bush | 32% | Unnamed Democrat | 48% | Dem +16 |
10/28/03 | Quinnipiac | NA | RV | 4% | Bush | 42% | Kerry | 50% | Dem +8 |
11/19/03 | Zogby | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 46% | Dem +5 |
1/7/04 | Marist | Link | 617 RV | 4% | Bush | 34% | Unnamed Democrat | 36% | Dem +2 |
4/12/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,279 RV, Nader an option | 2.7% | Bush | 35% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +14 |
4/12/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,279 RV, Nader not an option | 2.7% | Bush | 36% | Kerry | 53% | Kerry +17 |
4/15/04 | Marist | Link | 602 RV | 4% | Bush | 38% | Kerry | 56% | Kerry +18 |
4/22/04 | Siena Researh Institute | Link | 625 RV | 3.9% | Bush | 32% | Kerry | 51% | Kerry +19 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 3% | Bush | 34% | Kerry | 57% | Kerry +23 |
6/14/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,466 RV | 3% | Bush | 34% | Kerry | 52% | Kerry +18 |
Punditry: Most of the other polls besides Rasmussen had the race being right near where the Quinnipiac poll has it, which is in the Strong Advantage for Kerry column, suggesting that I moved it to Safe too quickly.
But in the grand scheme of things, does the difference between the two designations make a difference for New York at this point? If NY is to become competitive, the race will long be over.
Bush has an impossible task in trying to woo voters in a state where 49% of Republicans approve of the job Chuck Schumer is doing.
Rhode Island | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 4 | |
2000 Result | |
Gore 61% | |
Bush 32% |
Background: Nine of the last eleven times, Rhode Island has gone for the Democrat. The two exceptions? When Republican Presidents that the state rejected originally ran for re-election (Reagan and Nixon).
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2/7/04 | Brown University | NA | RV | 4.6% | Bush | 31% | Unnamed Democrat | 53% | Dem +22 |
6/14/04 | Brown University | Link | 477 RV | 5% | Bush | 25% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +24 |
Punditry: We can all sleep better now that Rhode Island has been polled again. Safe for Kerry.
F | West Virginia | ||
---|---|---|---|
Electoral Votes: 5 | |||
2000 Result | |||
Bush 52% | |||
Gore 46% |
Background: It was a huge change from the past when Bush beat Gore here in 2000. Over the last eighteen elections, the Democrats have won 14, and both of Clinton's wins would almost certainly have come even without Ross Perot. This is not a state the Democrats should have lost.
In the first ECB of 2000, West Virginia was rated as a battleground state with a slight advantage to Bush. This time around, it is starting as a complete tossup. Two of West Virginia's three Representatives are Democrats. Democrats control everything else: both Senate seats, both chambers of the state legislature, and the top executive branch offices. It is easy to see why, when 60% of the registered voters are Democrats and just 29% Republican.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3/24/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV, Nader not an option | 4% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 46% | Bush +1 |
3/24/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV, Nader an option | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 46% | Push |
4/15/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 4.5% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +5 |
4/29/04 | Ipsos Public Affairs | Link | 984 RV | 3% | Bush | 49% | Kerry | 45% | Bush +4 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.4% | Bush | 48.3% | Kerry | 45.9% | Bush +2.4 |
5/28/04 | Mason-Dixon** | Link | 625 LV | 4% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +6 |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.4% | Bush | 43.5% | Kerry | 46.6% | Kerry +2.9 |
6/17/04 | American Research Group | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +3 |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.5% | Bush | 49.1% | Kerry | 43.1% | Bush +6.0% |
Arizona | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 10 | |
2000 Result | |
Bush 51% | |
Gore 45% |
Background: Since Harry Truman, only Bill Clinton (during his re-elect) has carried the Grand Canyon State for the Democrats. Clinton also made it close with the help of Perot in 1992. Other than that, things have been surprisingly one-sided. Arizona has 6 of 8 of its Representatives and both of its Senators from the GOP. The GOP also controls both chambers of the state legislature. The top of the executive branch is run by Democrats, with Janet Napolitano being a first term Governor and Terry Goddard being the Attorney General. Most other top executive offices are held by Republicans. Republicans have a 41% to 35% lead in voter registration.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7/18/03 | Behavior Research Center | Link | 701 Adults | 4.3% | Bush | 55% | Unnamed Opponent | 41% | Bush +14 |
1/11/04 | Behavior Research Center | Link | 641 Adults | 3.9% | Bush | 50% | Highest Ranking Democrat (Dean) | 38% | Bush +12 |
2/19/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | RV | 4.3% | Bush | 52% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +8 |
2/22/04 | Arizona State University | Link | 430 RV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 46% | Dem +2 |
3/18/04 | Survey USA | Link | 634 LV | 4.0% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +9 |
4/26/04 | Arizona State University | Link | 410 RV | 5% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 38% | Bush +3 |
5/4/04 | Behavior Research Center | Link | 555 RV, Nader not an option | 4% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +4 |
5/4/04 | Behavior Research Center | Link | 555 RV, Nader an option | 4% | Bush | 45% | Kerry | 37% | Bush +8 |
5/23/04 | Arizona State University | Link | 377 RV | 5% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 38% | Bush +5 |
6/13/04 | Market Solutions | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +3 |
Punditry: A bit tighter in Arizona than the President's campaign would like, I am sure. There are some strange internals in this poll. Bush has a 90% approval rating among Republicans, which is about what is seen in other states. But 12% of Republicans, according to this poll, will vote for Kerry. Bush does incredibly poorly among independents, getting just 28% from them (with 27% either undecided or voting for a third party). Bush does get 14% of the Democrats. Taken together with the fact that overall the poll has 11% undecideds, it shows that within party, both Bush and Kerry are getting only 80% or less of their own; this seems extremely low to me.
The result is also tighter than the last handful of polls here. If the next one shows the state this close it will move into the slight advantage category, but for now I am keeping it as Leaning Towards Bush.
Washington | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 11 | |
2000 Result | |
Gore 50% | |
Bush 45% |
Background: The Democrats have won the last four, and 6 of the last 10, with all four Republican wins coming consecutively (Nixon, Ford, ReaganX2). It is unclear as to if Clinton would have won the first time here sans Perot; it would likely have been extremely close. The Dukakis/Bush race was very close. The Clinton/Dole race was not.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1/5/04 | SurveyUSA | NA | 975 RV | 3% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +1 |
2/4/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 975 RV | 3% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 55% | Kerry +12 |
3/24/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 698 LV | 4% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +4 |
3/25/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 5% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 50% | Kerry +6 |
4/5/04 | The Elway Poll | NA | LV | 5% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 46% | Kerry +5 |
4/18/04 | Moore Information (R) | Link | 500 RV | 4% | Bush | 41% | Kerry | 45% | Kerry +4 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 4.3% | Bush | 44.4% | Kerry | 52.5% | Kerry +8.1 |
6/4/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 654 LV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 49% | Kerry +5 |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 2.3% | Bush | 44.4% | Kerry | 51.7% | Kerry +7.3 |
6/11/04 | Moore Information (R) | Link | 500 RV | 4% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 45% | Kerry +1 |
6/11/04 | Mason-Dixon** | Link | 625 LV | 4% | Bush | 42% | Kerry | 46% | Kerry +4 |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 2.8% | Bush | 45.2% | Kerry | 51.6% | Kerry +6.4% |
** Done for a 'private public policy client'. Punditry: The newest Mason-Dixon poll is a partisan poll-- we just do not know for which side. It was done at the behest of an unidentified PAC. It shows what most polls in Washington have shown so far-- Kerry leading by a handful of points, right around one span of the Margin of Error. Leaning Towards Kerry.
North Carolina | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 15 | |
2000 Result | |
Bush 56% | |
Gore 43% |
Background: Since Lyndon Johnson's win here, only once have the Democrats taken Tar Heel electors. That's a bit deceptive, however, as many times it was extremely close. Carter lost to Reagan here by only two points in that nationwide blowout. Clinton lost two elections by a combined total of 5%. Yet the Clinton losses are also deceptive, in that the margins would have been considerably larger without Perot and his charts. Simply stated, like much of the south North Carolina votes Republican for President, although a southerner atop the ticket can make things interesting; not always though, as Al Gore demonstrated.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9/16/03 | Research2000 | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Edwards | 40% | Bush +11 |
11/15/03 | Research2000 | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 54% | Edwards | 42% | Bush +12 |
11/25/03 | Survey USA | Link | 563 RV | 4.2% | Bush | 53% | Kerry | 39% | Bush +14 |
11/25/03 | Survey USA | Link | 563 RV | 4.2% | Bush | 52% | Edwards | 45% | Bush +7 |
2/26/04 | Survey USA | Link | 654 RV | 3.9% | Bush | 53% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +11 |
3/11/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 400 LV | 3% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +8 |
4/1/04 | Bennett, Petts and Blumenthal (D) | No Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +7 |
5/14/04 | Mason-Dixon | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +7 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 5% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +4 |
6/16/04 | Research2000 | Link | 600 LV | 4% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 42% | Bush +5 |
Punditry: The poll reinforces Rasmussen's previous result (and Rasmussen himself has just recently upgraded North Carolina in Bush's direction based on his more recent numbers). What strikes me as interesting is the comparison between this result and the previous Research2000 North Carolina poll conducted last November matching up Bush against Edwards. Edwards got 42%, which is exactly what Kerry gets now. The margin is smaller because many who had been for Bush are now undecided. This shows that the President is vulnerable here but that the Democrats do not have an easy sell. Leans Towards Bush.
Tennessee | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 11 | |
2000 Result | |
Bush 51% | |
Gore 47% |
Background: Carter against Ford, Clinton twice (both times needing help from Perot), and Johnson. Republicans generally have had success here since Truman.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
12/8/03 | Mason-Dixon | Link | LV | 4% | Bush | 52% | Unnamed Democrat | 37% | Bush +15 |
1/29/04 | Mason-Dixon | NA | LV | 5% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +4 |
2/28/03 | Middle Tennessee State University | Link | 701 Voting Age Residents | 4% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +4 |
3/22/04 | Survey USA | Link | 678 LV | 3.9% | Bush | 52% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +11 |
5/24/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.0% | Bush | 49.3% | Kerry | 46.8% | Bush +2.5 |
6/6/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.7% | Bush | 54.3% | Kerry | 42.6% | Bush +11.7 |
6/16/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 5% | Bush | 49% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +8 |
6/21/04 | Zogby Interactive* | Link | LV | 3.5% | Bush | 57.4% | Kerry | 38.6% | Bush +18.8% |
6/21/04 | SurveyUSA | Link | 700 LV | 4% | Bush | 51% | Kerry | 41% | Bush +10 |
Punditry: SurveyUSA's poll remains steady since March. Good news for Kerry-- of the states SurveyUSA has polled, Tennessee has the highest percentage of his supporters who are for him as opposed to against Bush (although that just may mean that even the Democrat base in Tennessee is not as rabidly anti-Bush as it is elsewhere). I am very close to redesignating Tennessee as strong for Bush. An earlier ECB article suggested that Gore's impact on the ticket in his homestate was on the order of 5-10%, which would be in line with current polls. Leaning Towards Bush.
New Jersey | |
---|---|
Electoral Votes: 15 | |
2000 Result | |
Gore 56% | |
Bush 40% |
Background: New Jersey used to be considered a Republican state. Those days have passed, although there are still some signs of life. In the last 10 Presidential elections it has gone 1-6-3 with the Republican wins coming in the middle, the last Clinton win and the Gore win were by such substantial margins that it is hard to avoid the feeling that New Jersey is trending leftward.
If New Jersey remains tight enough to stay in the battleground, it is a case of back to the future. ECB2000 started with it leaning Gore's way. The Democrats have 7 of 13 Representatives and both Senate seats, control both chambers of the state legislature, hold all of the important executive offices, and have a 25%-19% advantage in voter registration.
Polling Data:
Date | Polling Company | Link | Type | MOE | Republican | Democrat | Margin | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9/8/03 | Rutgers | Link | 802 Adults | 3.5% | Bush | 43% | Unnamed Democrat | 35% | Bush +8 |
9/15/03 | Fairleigh Dickinson University/Public Mind | Link | 600 RV | 4% | Bush | 36% | Unnamed Democrat | 29% | Bush +7 |
9/25/03 | Quinnipiac | Link | RV | 3.1% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +5 |
11/10/03 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,027 RV | 3.1% | Bush | 46% | Kerry | 43% | Bush +3 |
1/11/04 | Fairleigh Dickinson University/Public Mind | Link | 600 RV | 4% | Bush | 40% | Unnamed Democrat | 32% | Bush +8 |
1/13/04 | Rutgers | Link | 823 RV | 4.2% | Bush | 41% | Unnamed Democrat | 38% | Bush +3 |
4/10/04 | Fairleigh Dickinson University/Public Mind | Link | 802 RV, Nader not an option | 3.5% | Bush | 47% | Kerry | 48% | Kerry +1 |
4/10/04 | Fairleigh Dickinson University/Public Mind | Link | 802 RV, Nader an option | 3.5% | Bush | 48% | Kerry | 44% | Bush +4 |
4/20/04 | Rasmussen | Link | 500 LV | 4.5% | Bush | 39% | Kerry | 51% | Kerry +12 |
5/4/04 | Rutgers / Eagleton | Link | 643 RV | 4% | Bush | 37% | Kerry | 43% | Kerry +6 |
5/16/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,129 RV, Nader not an option | 2.9% | Bush | 44% | Kerry | 47% | Kerry +3 |
5/16/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,129 RV, Nader an option | 3% | Bush | 43% | Kerry | 46% | Kerry +3 |
5/31/04 | Rasmussen | Link | LV | 5% | Bush | 39% | Kerry | 51% | Kerry +12 |
6/20/04 | Quinnipiac | Link | 1,167 RV, Nader an option | 3% | Bush | 40% | Kerry | 46% | Kerry +6 |
Punditry: Has the dream ended? Not quite-- the state still is polling in the competitive (but not overly so) category of Leaning Towards Kerry, which strikes me as about where it belongs. Bush is weaker among self-identified Republicans than he is in other states, with 12% of them saying they intend to vote for Kerry.
Effective National Popular Results: Bush 45.2%, Kerry 44.2% |
---|
|
Kerry E | F Bush | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Safe | Strong | Lean | Slight | Tossup | Slight | Lean | Strong | Safe |
DC (3) | DE (3) | CA (55) K49-B41 5/31/04 |
MI (17) K47-B45 5/31/04 |
NM (5) B46-K45 4/1/04 |
VA (13) B47-K45 5/31/04 |
NV (5) B49-K38 3/17/04 |
MS (6) B49-UD29 12/22/03 |
AK (3) |
HI (4) | VT (3) K51-B36 5/1/04 |
WA (11) K45-B44 K46-B42 6/11/04 |
NH (4) K46-B46 6/9/04 |
OR (7) B46-K45 5/31/04 |
AR (6) B48-K43 5/31/04 |
CO (9) B49-K44 4/14/04 |
KS (6) B57-K39 3/4/04 |
ND (3) |
MA (12) K58-B33 5/31/04 |
CT (7) K46-B36 6/1/04 |
IA (7) K49-B41 5/31/04 |
WV (5) K47-B44 6/17/04 |
PA (21) B45-K44 5/31/04 |
FL (27) B50-K43 6/14/04 |
MO (11) B48-K37 6/8/04 |
OK (7) B53-K34 5/20/04 |
NE (5) |
RI (4) K49-B25 6/14/04 |
ME (4) K54-B35 5/31/04 |
MN (10) K46.5-B42.2 6/14/04 |
- | WI (10) B44-K42 6/8/04 |
- | AZ (10) B44-K41 6/13/04 |
SD (3) B50-K35 5/21/04 |
WY (3) |
- | IL (21) K52-B39 6/9/04 |
NJ (15) K46-B40 6/20/04 |
- | OH (20) K45-B42 6/8/04 |
- | NC (15) B47-K42 6/16/04 |
LA (9) B48-K42 5/31/04 |
ID (4) B55-K23 3/17/04 |
- | MD (10) K52-B38 6/9/04 |
- | - | - | - | TN (11) B51-K41 6/21/04 |
GA (15) B49-K32 6/2/04 |
UT (5) B67-K22 5/10/04 |
- | NY (31) K52-B34 6/14/04 |
- | - | - | - | - | SC (8) B49-K39 5/31/04 |
IN (11) B54-K33 5/19/04 |
- | - | - | - | - | - | - | KY (8) B52-K39 6/8/04 |
MT (3) B53-K33 5/26/04 |
- | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | AL (9) B57-K36 5/31/04 |
- | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | TX (34) B55-K38 5/31/04 |
Totals | ||||||||
Kerry States | Battleground States | Bush States | ||||||
|
||||||||
23 | 79 | 98 | 26 | 63 | 46 | 61 | 62 | 80 |
|
||||||||
200 | 135 | 203 |
Ping
Ciao!
Thanks for keeping this going! I look forward to your recaps every week.
Thanks, friend!
CLEVELAND (AP) President Bush leads Democratic rival John Kerry in the key swing state of Ohio in a three-way matchup that includes independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader, a new poll shows. Republican Bush was at 47%, followed by Kerry at 41% and Nader at 3% among registered voters surveyed by Mason-Dixon Polling and Research for The Plain Dealer. Results were released late Saturday. Nine percent of voters were undecided. Bush's lead came although about half in the poll expressed disapproval of his handling of the economy, found to be the No. 1 issue among Ohio voters. The state is one of several in the region to lose manufacturing jobs under Bush, while Kerry has made the jobs issue central to his White House campaign. These latest results come two weeks after an American Research Group poll of 600 likely voters found Kerry had edged ahead of Bush in the state, 49% to 42%, with Nader at 2%. Bush won Ohio in 2000 by 4.4 percentage points. The Mason-Dixon Polling telephone survey of 1,500 registered voters was conducted May 20-25, and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
Tremendous work. I appreciate the dispassionate statistical analysis.
I can't beleive that Kerry is ahead in any poll on the economy. The stock market is above 10,000 (a nearly 3000 point gain since Jan of '02), unemployment is at 5.6%, which is a figure that the clinton campaign was bragging about in 1996 and a figure that was touted in all the 'mainstream' media outlets at that time as a remarkable achievement by clinton's administration. Kerry has said nothing about his economic platform other than he plans to raise taxes and somehow create 10 million jobs in 4 years. I have yet to hear a follow up question to kerry asking him how exactly he plans to do this by over taxing the very people who would create these jobs. I guess the short answer is that they will all be newly created government jobs from which no one can be fired no matter how incompetent. But hey, those evil rich people (as well as the rest of us) will be paying higher taxes to keep those government coffers full, so everything will be fine. Be sure to practice your arabic if ketchup boy somehow wins the election.
You know, you're some kind of whiz kid. I love this!
Thank-you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You know, you're some kind of whiz kid. I love this!
Thank-you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Dales -- Suppose the election is a 269-269 tie & thrown into the House. This would be the newly elected 2005 House, as I understand it.
Should that happen, whom do you think would have the advantage, Bush or Kerry?
(Just a guess, I realize.)
Thanks
I want Bush to win by a landslide.
Kerry would be a disaster in the War on Terror!
I want to see the DemonicRats humilated!
Thanks again for all the hard work Dales.
I saw someone, John Gibson maybe, on Fox today interviewing ex-Senators Al D'mato and Torch. The interviewer said to Torch he knew how optimistic the Kerry people are. D'mato chimed in the President can still win the election.
What universer are they in? As far as I can see both FL and OH have made a turn for the president although OH is back in the toss up category. If Bush gets FL and OH, it is hard for me to find a combinnation of states that cause him to lose.
Since Dales "forgot" to include a question this week..allow me.....who does Hugh Hewitt, in his WorldNetDaily column, name as America's most astute analyst and commentator on all things related to polls.
I saw that also..if the Torch is the best they can do as a Kerry spokesman, they're in deep doo-doo...
I think we all know the answer to that one?
Good Work!
Could you add me to your ping list?
Thanks.
With Ohio, that puts Bush at 269.
In an election thrown to the house, each state gets one vote.
Bush by a wide margin.
Now I'm totally depressed. If the race is actually this close the media and the democRAT crooks will take it. Honest people have no chance any more.
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I Wouldn't Touch It With a 10 Foot Poll
Issues
Let's look at some recent polls that asked issue questions beyond the horserace question. There have been three that I have chosen due to them being relatively similar in timeframe and having many similarly worded questions.
I think it is safe to say that these results are all comparable. One is favorable in result to Kerry, one is favorable in result to Bush, and one has them tied. There are plenty of actual support levels for the candidates that would have all three polls being within their margin of error (for example, if really the race is 44-44). How do these polls compare on the issue questions?
The three polls show remarkably similar numbers for Bush, but Kerry's numbers vary considerably. It is possible this difference can be attributed to the phrasings, although the wording does not make that seem likely. A possibility is that there is a significant number of voters who are not sure and do not have a good feeling for where Kerry is on the issue, and some days they think he would be good and on other days they are less convinced. Another is that it is simply a result of sample differences (although the fact that the widest gap here is in the poll that shows the race tied suggests that is not the case).
Again, the Opinion Dynamics poll has fewer committing which does suggest they were not pushing as hard for noncommittal respondents to choose. It is harder to see any discernable pattern from these answers either. The poll most favorable in the horserace to Kerry gave Bush the biggest margin on this question, and the poll that was most favorable to Bush on the horserace gave Kerry the biggest margin on this question. This suggests to me that while Iraq dominates the news and clearly is the issue many partisans have rallied around, it is not the issue that is driving the election.
Each favors Kerry, which suggests that the reason he is doing so well against the incumbent is that this issue is still working in his favor. Again the worst result for the President was in the poll that showed the best horserace result for him, which is unusual.
As with the terrorism question, Bush's numbers are steady, while Kerry's are fluctuating. This is normally an issue that Republicans win; the fact that Bush is not is interesting (and troubling for the President's supporters), but so is the fact that Kerry is not winning handily while having the advantage here.
Yet again, Bush's numbers are steady while Kerry's fluctuate in a manner that does not correlate completely with his standing in the horserace question.
Again, Bush's numbers are steady while Kerry's flip-flop.
The pattern should be clear that all of these polls show basically the same result for Bush:
The table for Kerry is more interesting:
There are several possible interpretations to make from this data.
1. There has been a trend towards Kerry on the issues over time. This assumes that the samples are comparable. Favoring this interpretation is that on most issues, Kerry's support has increased from the earliest poll to the latest. A problem with this interpretation is that the horserace question has not shown the same change. Another is that during this timeframe, Rasmussen has polled on the economy question and found no such trend. However, if this interpretation were correct, then it would suggest that Kerry's advertising has been paying off in the underlying sentiment and makes it likely that he will see movement towards him in the horserace question relatively soon.
2. Terrorism is the main issue. This assumes that the differences in the results (especially for Kerry) are primarily due to sample differences and/or methodology differences. Opinion Dynamics asked the issue question only of registered voters while the other two asked it of all adults. In addition, consistently for the Opinion Dynamics poll fewer respondents expressed a preference, suggesting that they pressed people to make a choice less than the other two. Favoring this interpretation is that the correlation to the horserace number is much higher for the terrorism answer than for any other across all three polls.
The correlation coefficient ranges from 1 to -1, with a perfect correlation getting a value of 1, no correlation a value of 0, and a perfect inverse correlation a value of -1.
A problem with this interpretation is that the two polls that had the same methodology (but possibly had sample differences) were the two that had the most markedly different horserace results. However, if this interpretation is correct, it would suggest that the primary issue influence on the election is the issue that most favors the President. Working against this interpretation is that earlier polls done this year did not show the same correlations; Bush had substantial leads on the terrorism question but did not have similar leads in the horserace.
3. On the issues, it is all about Kerry. This interpretation suggests that since voter preference for Bush is pretty steady across the three polls, the real variable is how comfortable the voters are with Kerry. Favoring this interpretation is the fact that since voters know less about Kerry than they do about Bush, his preference numbers would be more volatile, which fits the data. This could also explain why, despite having advantages on so many issues, he only leads in a poll that had 8% more Democrats; if voters think they prefer him on the issues but are not sure, they may be hesitating to get on board for the horserace question. Working against this interpretation is the conventional wisdom that Presidential re-election campaigns are referendums of the incumbent.
There could be other interpretations. However, it is still possible to form recommendations for what each candidate should do to enhance his chances if any or all of these interpretations have validity. Each candidate needs to continue to work on defining Kerry before the other defines Kerry; at this point it appears that Kerry is at worst holding his own in this regard and at best winning it but either way it is clear that he is still not in complete focus for many voters. On terrorism, Bush needs to make the case that it is the primary issue, that he has handled it well, and that Kerry cannot be trusted. Kerry's goals on the subject are the opposite. He should stress other issues since he has (currently) an advantage on them, while taking advantage of opportunities to encourage voter doubt about Bush's handling of terrorism to keep that from becoming the dominant issue in the campaign. But more than anything else, the President has to figure out a way to get off the defensive. He can make arguments that things are better than people are perceiving when it comes to the economy and Iraq and other things, but that still would only be focusing voters on matters on which they have demonstrated skepticism and would be opening himself up to constant counterattacks and spin. He needs to come up with bold plans for his next term and sell the voters on them, to neutralize Kerry's developing advantage on the issues.