Posted on 08/17/2010 3:49:27 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Whit Ayres, Jon McHenry, and Dan Judy just completed a series of polls in twelve key congressional districts on the East Coast. (Another two batches of polls in the near future will look at key races in the heartland and West Coast.)
Their polls, conducted for American Action Forum on July 28, 29, 31, and August 1, with 4,800 likely general-election voters 400 each in Connecticuts 4th and 5th districts, Floridas 24th district, New Yorks 20th, 23rd and 25th districts; Pennsylvanias 3rd, 10th, 11th, and 12th districts; Virginias 5th district; and West Virginias 3rd district show competitive races throughout the East. In aggregate, they find 35 percent of the voters in these districts say their representative deserves reelection while 52 percent say it is time for someone else.
They report:
Beyond the deserves reelection figure, the key results from the surveys are:
1. Voters say the country is on the wrong track by a nearly three-to-one margin. Sixty-eight percent of the likely voters in these districts say the country is off on the wrong track, while just 24 percent say the country is heading in the right direction.
2. The economy is the most important issue in a top-of-mind measure, while controlling government spending and making Washington, DC accountable are also important in a closed-ended question. Forty-eight percent of voters say the economy is the most important issue facing the country in an open-ended question. When presented with seven options in a closed-ended question, 26 percent of voters say creating new jobs is most likely to affect their vote for Congress, 21 percent say controlling government spending, and 19 percent say making Washington, DC more accountable are the issues most likely to affect their vote for Congress this fall.
3. A plurality of voters prefers a Republican on the generic ballot test. While each of these twelve districts have Democratic incumbents, voters in these districts prefer a Republican to a Democrat as their next congressman by a 38 to 31 percent margin.
4. President Obama and Speaker Pelosi are both viewed unfavorably in these districts. Voters in these districts give Barack Obama a 43 to 50 percent favorable to unfavorable rating and give Nancy Pelosi a 27 to 57 percent rating.
5. A majority of the likely voters in these districts opposes the health care reform plan. Voters oppose the new law by a 51 to 39 percent margin, including 40 percent who strongly oppose it.
Methodology
All respondents were selected randomly from a list of registered voters in the district, and indicated they are likely to vote in the elections for Congress this fall, and interviews were conducted by live interviewers. Quotas in each district CT 04, CT 05, FL 24, NY 20, NY 23, NY 25, PA 03, PA 10, PA 11, PA 12, VA 05, and WV 03 were set by gender, age, and county consistent with past participation in the district. Each district included 400 interviews, for a total of 4,800 interviews in the region.
DISTRICTS WITH THE DEMOCRAT COMFORTABLY LEADING:
Connecticut 5: While challenger Mark Greenberg has just 53 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Chris Murphys 95 percent name recognition, Murphy falls short of 50 percent with a 49 to 39 percent lead.
(A complication in the above poll: Greenberg lost the primary after this poll was conducted; Sam Caligiuri is the GOP nominee in this district. It is possible, although not that likely, that hes polling at significantly different level than Greenberg.)
West Virginia 3: Rep. Nick Rahall with a comfortable lead over the lesser-known Spike Maynard. Rahall has 97 percent name recognition, compared to Maynards 72 percent, and leads on the ballot by a 53 to 37 percent margin.
DISTRICTS WITH THE DEMOCRAT NARROWLY LEADING:
Connecticut 4: Despite challenger Dan Debicella having just 35 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Jim Himess 93 percent name recognition, Himes leads by a slim 46 to 42 percent margin.
New York 20: Despite challenger Chris Gibson having just 37 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Scott Murphys 91 percent name recognition, Murphy leads by a slim 45 to 40 percent margin.
New York 23: While challenger Matt Doheny has just 48 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Bill Owenss 87 percent name recognition, Owens manages just a split of the vote with 41 percent to 39 percent for Doheny.
New York 25: Despite challenger Ann Marie Buerkle having just 50 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Dan Maffeis 90 percent name recognition, Maffei leads by a slim 44 to 41 percent margin.
DISTRICTS WITH THE GOP CHALLENGER NARROWLY LEADING:
Florida 24: Despite challenger Craig Miller having just 28 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Suzanne Kosmass 88 percent name recognition, Miller leads by a slim 44 to 41 percent margin.
Pennsylvania 3: Despite challenger Mike Kelly having just 62 percent name recognition, he leads Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper by a 52 to 38 percent margin.
Pennsylvania 10: Despite challenger Tom Marino having just 59 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Chris Carneys 94 percent name recognition, Marino leads on the ballot by a 52 to 37 percent margin.
Pennsylvania 11: Challenger Lou Barlettas 93 percent name recognition is very similar to Rep. Paul Kanjorskis 96 percent, and Barletta holds a 52 to 41 percent lead on the ballot.
Pennsylvania 12: Challenger Tim Burnss 84 percent name recognition is almost identical to Rep. Mark Critzs 82 percent, and Burns leads on the ballot by a slim 44 to 40 percent margin.
Virginia 5: Despite challenger Robert Hurt having 75 percent name recognition compared to Rep. Tom Perriellos 95 percent name recognition, Hurt leads by a 49 to 43 percent margin.
Kudos to American Action Forum for helping us get a sense of how things stand for the GOP at this moment: facing opportunities for enormous gains, but with a lot of work still ahead of them.
Encouraging news.
I’ve read that the Dems do have huge money to spend and will be able to run a lot of tv ads.
But I think the feeling in America is too strong and all the energy is on our side. Just the opposite of 2008.
Ok, so I’m confused. Whenever I see individual breakouts of specific races, it looks like a GOP landslide-—yet the weekly “congressional updates” we get only have the Republicans winning 34 seats as of today. Who’se right?
Ok, so I’m confused. Whenever I see individual breakouts of specific races, it looks like a GOP landslide-—yet the weekly “congressional updates” we get only have the Republicans winning 34 seats (net) as of today. Who’se right?
How is Alan Grayson fairing? I’d love to see him thrown out.
Well, we won’t really know for sure until Election Night. ;-)
I'm praying they do. I bet they once again over reach and air some outlandish commercials pissing off even more of the electorate for playing "politics" while the Country suffers.
Bump
On every post and thread, my Tagline has said it all for over a year.
100+ seats.
A TSUNAMI is coming to wipe the Dems from Power.
I know a little bit about the PA races. The GOP guy in PA 10 has done virtually no campaigning, and has no money, and he’s up 15 points. Amazing. Mayor Lou Barletta is up 11 points in PA 11. That’s significant. Barletta ran against Kanjorski two years ago, and lost by 2 points I believe, in a Democratic tidal wave year. This should be his year.
The Democrats will pull out all the stops, saturate the airwaves with misleading and false advertising, but these are very good numbers at this stage.
Encouraging, yes. But they’ve got 11 weeks to turn things around.
Keep plugging away. “You’re always losing until you win.”
(My high school volleyball captain who let me be on the team despite my inexperience.)
From what I see America is headed in the right direction. Away from Communists Crooks and Democrats.
It is hugely important not only to elect these Pub challengers but to elect Pub state legislators, guvs as well as Congressional incumbents. It will take a united front of GOP,Indies, Libertar., Reagan Dems, Teas to do this. Why? Because any vote for Dems from local to Federal offices gives them a jump on re-districting for the House in 2012. That would be a disaster because we all know Dems lie, cheat, lose ballots, deny military ballots, and make up ones for felons and illegals. That is the truth and it is outrageous that no one stops them. Poll watchers better in these upcoming Nov. elections.
+1
get ready for the Demagogues’ “October Surprise” -— they are beyond desperate and will do anything
Politicians can only call the American people racist homophobic xenophobes for so long before they take it out on them at the ballot box.
Ok, so Im confused. Whenever I see individual breakouts of specific races, it looks like a GOP landslide-yet the weekly congressional updates we get only have the Republicans winning 34 seats as of today. Whose right?
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The weekly updates reflect the district level polls. As more favorable polls come in the takeover estimates will increase. So far there just haven’t been enough polling. The polls listed in this thread are a good example of this - in many cases these are the first polls we’ve seen.
the real good news this election cycle is,
Bush is gone
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