Posted on 09/17/2008 4:52:14 PM PDT by Perdogg
Thats among registereds. Among likely voters, he leads by the same margin, a bad result given that Mavericks typically fared much better with that group. Maybe those young Obamites are tuning in and turning out after all?
Exercise caution until we have details about the sample, as some of these swings are eye-poppingly dramatic. Even so, its safe to say the bounce is indeed gone:
(Excerpt) Read more at hotair.com ...
Yes...
To be fair, when the polls turn against us we tend to become as hysterical as the Marxists on Dumpsterunderground when the polls turn against The One. This race is like the stock market. Panic is easy to come by. Success depends upon clear thought and dedication to keep working.
I agree
“I think McCain needs to go on more of an offensive before next Fridays debate.”
I just think he needs to tear Zero a new one in the debates. These ads aren’t nearly as effective as McCain himself can be ripping Zed to shreds.
BINGO - Debates should be/will be the deciding factor. Let just hope McCain does very well and Palin crushes Biden.
McCain vs. Obama: The battleground looks familiar
Republican John McCain’s recent surge in opinion polls has restored a familiar look to a White House race that once promised to reshuffle the political map, with traditional battleground states like Ohio and Michigan back at center stage.
McCain’s momentum has improved his standing in several swing states that hold the keys to the White House, and put a dent in Democrat Barack Obama’s hopes of expanding the fight to normally Republican states like Georgia, Montana and Indiana.
As a result, the November 4 presidential election is likely to be decided in many of the same states as the 2004 race between Republican President George W. Bush and Democratic challenger John Kerry.
“Most of these states are still close and competitive, but the map is beginning to look an awful lot like 2004,” pollster John Zogby said.
Four big battleground states — Ohio and Florida, won by Bush in 2004, and Pennsylvania and Michigan, won by Kerry — will be top targets for Obama and McCain in the next seven weeks.
New Hampshire, Virginia and three toss-up states in the West — Nevada, Colorado and New Mexico — also will get plenty of attention from the candidates. All but New Hampshire were won by Bush in 2004, and only Virginia and Colorado were not hard-fought in that race.
Other states like Wisconsin, Minnesota and Missouri could rise to prominence in the next seven weeks as the candidates hunt for the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House. Those votes, allocated to each state based on their population, are awarded to the popular-vote winner in each state.
The momentum generated by McCain with his pick of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his No. 2 has propelled him into essentially a tie with Obama in national polls.
At the state level, it allowed McCain to close the gap on Obama in Democratic-leaning Michigan and Pennsylvania — states where a McCain win would spell disaster for Obama — and to open solid leads on Obama in states like Florida and Missouri.
McCain has a slight lead in Ohio, which could prove to be the ultimate battleground again just as in 2004, when Bush’s narrow win there edged out Kerry.
MCCAIN NEEDS OHIO
“McCain probably can’t win without Ohio, it gets very hard to piece together the electoral votes he needs without it,” said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac Poll. “Obama can’t win without Pennsylvania.”
Obama had hoped a national surge in Democratic voter registration, along with record turnout among young and black voters, could help boost him in traditional Republican strongholds like Georgia, North Dakota, Montana and Indiana, but those hopes appear to be fading.
Obama, an Illinois senator, still has a strong shot at capturing several states won by Bush in 2004. At the top of the list is Iowa, where Obama started his run to the Democratic nomination with a win in January and where McCain finished a weak fourth among Republicans.
Obama and McCain also are running neck-and-neck in New Mexico, Colorado and Nevada, three states where population changes and a growing Hispanic electorate have bolstered Democratic prospects.
But those three Western states combined have only 19 electoral votes — less than Ohio alone — and could have an affinity for their fellow Westerners in McCain, an Arizona senator, and Palin.
“In the Western states, there is a cultural advantage for McCain and Palin that could make a difference in a close election,” Brown said. “And it’s an open question how many new Hispanic voters there will be.”
Obama, who would be the first black U.S. president, also hopes to capture Virginia, a Southern state that has not voted for a Democrat in a presidential race since 1964.
The state has shifted toward Democrats in recent elections as the growing northern suburbs outside Washington account for one-third of state voters. McCain has solidified his lead in the past few weeks, but Obama has made a major push for the state’s 13 electoral votes.
Obama, however, has struggled in Florida to keep pace with the showings of Kerry, who lost by 5 percentage points, and Gore, who lost the state to Bush by 537 votes in a disputed result in 2000.
McCain, a former Vietnam prisoner of war, hopes his appeal to independents and Obama’s difficulties with white working-class voters make for a winning combination in crucial blue-collar battlegrounds like Michigan and Pennsylvania.
“Obama’s weakness with white working class voters is why Michigan is in play. In this kind of economy, with a Republican president with this kind of unpopularity, the Democratic nominee should not have to be worrying about Michigan. But he does,” Brown said.
(9/17/2008)
- By John Whitesides, Reuters
“To be fair, when the polls turn against us we tend to become as hysterical...”
Sure. But there is no way he got a 5-point bump overnight. Ridiculous. He didn’t get that much of a bump overnight from his convention! Clearly meant to cause hysteria over here. Outlier! Outlier!
It's also had quite an effect on a bunch of naive FReepers.
This, like every election, is driving me crazy. The last election I didn’t worry about was 1984.
C’mon, polls are easily manipulated in order to further the media narrative and create phony news. It’s the MSM way of feeling powerful and important.
When we get close to election day, the wide discrepancies dramatically narrow. Do you know why? It’s not because people have finally made up thier minds. It’s so the pollsters can say, “Look at my record of final predictions”.
They want you to think that the fluctuations in polling numbers reflects an uncertain electorate. Hogwash! It primarily reflects MSM manipulation.
- Been there, seen it to many times to be fooled.
Here’s the deal on polls.The ones showing a McCain ‘bounce’ are no more accurate than these recent ones.These ones are definitely ‘push’ polls designed to influence.The most notorious recent case of the unreliability of polls is the 1980 election which showed Carter a few points ahead of Reagan a few days before the election.The pollsters responding to the “what went wrong?”questions did a lame CYA after the Reagan landslide saying “well,well uh, we saw this movement in the late hours.” Of course, most recently you had the 2004 exit polls which showed a Kerry victory.Polls are at best a starting point for conversation and strategy.
cBS has been oversampling Dems in all their polls.
cBS has been oversampling Dems in all their polls.
There are more democrats registered than republicans, that’s not part of the poll that’s flawed. The flaws are NUMEROUS, it’s basically giving the opposite results with independents and women that EVERY OTHER poll has.
This CBS poll is the only poll that I would totally discount in it’s current form. Rasmussen has McCain up 1.
It is time for the official, McCain-sanctioned Rev. Wright, Ayers and Infant born Alive advertisements. McCain MUST destroy Obama’s chances before voters start to lock into their choices. With these skeletons in Obama’s closet, if this election is close on election day, it will be electoral malpractice.
When was the last time anyone heard from Joe?
According to Rasmussen, people self identify themselves as Dems around 5% more than Republicans, and you’ll notice that cBS weighs Dems at 10% more in this poll. They double Rasmussen’s figure - someone is cBS’ing.
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