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ABC Poll: Candidates Neck and Neck (W50%, K47% - Job Approval 53%)
ABC News ^ | 10/18

Posted on 10/18/2004 2:31:13 PM PDT by ambrose

Poll: Candidates Neck and Neck

As Election Looms, Bush Has a Slight Edge in Some Underlying Issues

ANALYSIS
By GARY LANGER

Oct. 18, 2004— - The 2004 campaign moves into its last two weeks with a close race, but one in which George W. Bush holds the advantage in a range of underlying measurements.

Most likely voters, 53 percent, approve of Bush's job performance overall. Most, 52 percent, have a favorable opinion of him personally. His supporters are more enthusiastic than John Kerry's. Bush easily leads in three of four personal attributes -- leadership, clarity and honesty. He's stronger on terrorism, Iraq and -- a recent gain -- taxes. And, echoing Bush's latest line of attack, more likely voters see Kerry as too liberal than see Bush as too conservative.

Yet for all these the race between them remains close: Bush has 50 percent support among likely voters, Kerry 47 percent and Ralph Nader one percent in the latest ABC News tracking poll, based on interviews Thursday through Sunday.

Sampling, data collection and tabulation for this poll were done by TNS.

One reason Kerry remains competitive is that he's doing better than Bush among independents, a crucial swing voter group. Another is the fact that terrorism, Bush's keystone issue, has slipped on the priority list as the candidates have focused on domestic matters. Just before the first debate, 24 percent of likely voters said terrorism was the most important issue in their vote; today it's 19 percent (and among independents, 17 percent).


Most Importanat Issues

Issue Now 9/26

Economy/Jobs 26% 27

Iraq 26 20

Terrorism 19 24

Health Care 9 11

Education 5 5


It matters because concerns about terrorism so strongly fuel Bush's candidacy. Among people who say it's their top issue, nine in 10 support him. The more of them there are, the better he does. And the more who cite other top issues as most important in their vote -- the economy, Iraq, health care or education -- the better for Kerry.

Trust

Among all likely voters, Bush leads by 20 points in trust to handle terrorism, 56-36 percent, and by 11 points in trust to handle the situation in Iraq, 52-41 percent. That's essentially the same as a week ago, and in turn about the same as two weeks ago.

Bush also leads Kerry by eight points, 50-42 percent, in trust to handle taxes, an issue on which Bush has been on the attack. It may be having an effect: Preferences on this issue ran a slightly closer 48-46 percent between Bush and Kerry the week before last.

Kerry, for his part, leads by six points, 48-42 percent, in trust to handle health care; that's backed off very slightly from a 51-38 percent Kerry lead last week. The two are closer on creating jobs, and in trust to handle education and the economy.

These preferences cross-pollinate with vote preference. As noted, likely voters who cite terrorism as their top issue favor Bush by a huge margin. Those who cite the economy as their top issue, by contrast, favor Kerry by 37 points; Iraq, Kerry +23; health care, Kerry +23; and education, Kerry +15. Bush leads, by 39 points, among the 13 percent who cite some other issue.


Trust to Handle the Issues

Issue Bush Kerry

Terrorism 56% 36

Iraq 52 41

Taxes 50 42

Education 46 45

The Economy 46 47

Creating Jobs 43 47

Health Care 42 48


Attributes

Personal views of the candidates also inform vote choices, and these show substantial stability. Bush leads Kerry by 22 points as the stronger leader, by 18 points as having taken clearer stands on the issues and by nine points as more honest and trustworthy -- the most important attribute of the lot. They remain about even in another, empathy.

One of these does show considerable progress for Kerry: Before the first debate he trailed by 33 points on taking clear stands on the issues, 60-27 percent. He stills trails by a wide margin, but has narrowed the gap.

Enthusiasm

As noted in Sunday's tracking poll analysis, 56 percent of likely voters expect Bush to win, despite a dead heat in the horse race most of last week. Today's poll finds that Bush also commands greater enthusiasm: Fifty-nine percent of his supporters are "very enthusiastic" about his candidacy, compared with 45 percent of Kerry's.

Enthusiasm for Kerry had advanced to 50 percent after his strong showing in the first debate -- but it's slipped back. Bush lost strong enthusiasm after the first debate, but his appears to have stabilized at a higher level than Kerry's. Enthusiasm can be a factor in voter turnout, critical in a close race.


Strong Entusiasm for Candidates Among Likely Voters, Bush/Kerry Supporters

Date Bush Kerry

7/25 54% 42

8/1 57 59

8/29 61 43

9/8 65 43

9/26 65 42

10/3 57 50

10/17 59 45


Ideology

At the same time. Bush's criticisms of Kerry as too liberal show some continued traction. Forty-five percent of likely voters describe Kerry as too liberal, compared with 37 percent who see Bush as too conservative. The two ran about evenly on this question in July, but Bush opened an 11-point lead on it after his convention, and he's held onto it.

A key reason for the difference is that there are far more Republicans who call Kerry too liberal -- 82 percent -- than there are Democrats who call Bush too conservative, 57 percent. The reason is the ideological split within parties: Among likely voters, 60 percent of Republicans are conservatives, while just 27 percent of Democrats are liberals. Indeed across all likely voters, conservatives outnumber liberals by 2-1.


Ideology of the Candidates

Bush Kerry

Too Liberal 9% 45

Too Conservative 37 6

About Right 50 44


Faves

Bush's personal favorability rating, the most basic measure of a public figure's popularity, has moved back to 52-42 percent (favorable-unfavorable) after a slightly tighter reading last week. Kerry's favorability score, 46 percent, hasn't cracked the 50-percent line since just after his convention. Forty-three percent see him unfavorably.

Groups

As noted, Kerry is doing better among independent voters, who divide by 52-44 percent, Kerry-Bush, in this poll. But Kerry's advantage is not assured: As with all likely voters more broadly, among independents who support Bush, 48 percent are very enthusiastic about him, while among those who support Kerry, enthusiasm is lower, 35 percent.

White Catholics, the other chief swing voter group, divide by 50-47 percent, Bush-Kerry. Bush is doing better among white Catholics than among independents in the ideology war: Thirty-four percent of white Catholics say Bush is too conservative, while more, 45 percent, say Kerry's too liberal.

Bush makes up for his shortfall among independents by again poaching more Democrats (15 percent) than Kerry wins Republicans (seven percent); Kerry had battled him to parity on this last week, but the disparity in Bush's favor has emerged again. Democrats account for 36 percent of likely voters in this poll, Republicans for 34 percent.

Among other groups, older voters -- hotly contested because of their high turnout -- divide absolutely evenly, 47-47 percent. Young voters, under 30, a subject of great speculation as to turnout, divide fairly similarly (given sampling tolerances), 50-46 percent, Kerry-Bush.

Bush leads by 11 points among men (the same as his margin four years ago); Kerry by five points among women (Al Gore won them by 11 points in 2000). There is a very sharp division between married women (+8 points for Bush, 53-45 percent) and single women; a core Democratic group, they favor Kerry by 60-36 percent.

Methodology

This poll was conducted by telephone Oct. 14-17, 2004 among a random national sample of 2,402 adults, including 2,130 registered voters and 1,544 likely voters. The results have a 2.5-point error margin for the likely voter sample. ABC News and The Washington Post are sharing data collection for this tracking poll, then independently applying their own models to arrive at likely voter estimates. Sampling, data collection and tabulation by TNS of Horsham, Pa.

See previous analyses in our Poll Vault.



TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: abcnewswp; polls
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To: Dog

I like that breakdown, its probably a more realistic number for there to be 36% dims and 34% Republicansm, rather than the Gallup flavor of the week polls.


21 posted on 10/18/2004 2:39:36 PM PDT by aft_lizard (Actually i voted for John Kerry before I voted against him.)
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To: traderrob6

Except that 9% think Kerry is too conservative and 6% think Bush is too liberal. This just goes to show polls are WAY WAY off and litered with idiots. Do you really think the people who think Kerry is too conservatie and Bush too liberal will know how to find there way to the polling place?


22 posted on 10/18/2004 2:40:10 PM PDT by Illinois Rep
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To: ambrose

INternals, internals, internals. Besides being at 50%, the internals are great if measuring where undecideds will break.

Nothing but good news in that write up.


23 posted on 10/18/2004 2:42:55 PM PDT by madison46 (Will we EVER get a poll out of OH??)
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To: RockinRight

You ever notice, hopw they give a poll, say it's 52-48..MOE is +/- 3..therefore they always say it's within the margin or error..true, but it could just as easily therefore be 55-45


24 posted on 10/18/2004 2:43:00 PM PDT by ken5050
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To: ambrose

Joe Lockhart said job approval means everything yesterday.

http://realclearpolitics.com/Presidential_04/bush_ja.html

Looks like that is also up!


25 posted on 10/18/2004 2:44:46 PM PDT by MEG33 (John Kerry has been AWOL on issues of national security for two decades)
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To: Illinois Rep

No worries....the people who answered that foolishly will never vote,,,,,,Hopefully


26 posted on 10/18/2004 2:45:09 PM PDT by traderrob6
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To: traderrob6

I think those voters are the ones getting crack provided to them by the DNC for showing up to vote early (and often no doubt)


27 posted on 10/18/2004 2:47:52 PM PDT by Illinois Rep
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To: Illinois Rep

Most people here think Bush is too liberal. But we're still voting for him. :-)


28 posted on 10/18/2004 2:48:14 PM PDT by stands2reason
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To: ambrose

"Neck and neck"

"slight edge"

Starting to sound like talking points to me.


29 posted on 10/18/2004 2:48:40 PM PDT by saigon
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To: ambrose
They STILL don't get it: "Another is the fact that terrorism, Bush's keystone issue, has slipped on the priority list as the candidates have focused on domestic matters."

Issue Now 9/26

Iraq 26 20

Terrorism 19 24

THIS IS THE SAME DAMN ISSUE. IN FACT, BUSH HAS GAINED A POINT IN THE TWO COMBINED ISSUES!!!!!!! AAAARRRRRGGGGGEEHHHHH.

30 posted on 10/18/2004 2:48:50 PM PDT by LS
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To: ambrose

Bush leads 52-4l on handling of Iraq but on that issue Kerry leads. Explain that one.


31 posted on 10/18/2004 2:51:19 PM PDT by rushmom
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To: clintg

Trust me, as a history professor, I can tell you that most elections in U.S. history are quite close. Either the pop vote or the EC is usually close. FDR had an electoral blowout in, I think, 1940, but the popular vote was much closer than you would think. Three elections (1884, 1888, and 1892) were decided by a few electoral votes and a small pop vote margin.


32 posted on 10/18/2004 2:51:21 PM PDT by LS
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To: rushmom

He led on that one....before he didn't


33 posted on 10/18/2004 2:53:32 PM PDT by traderrob6
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To: LS

I agree with you--yet history has NO way of predicting how elections will turn with late breaking news that is spread with the speed of light of the internet. Any late inning-October surprised could cause a landslide in this Presidential election cycle. The internet has finally grown out of it's infancy and is in full throttle. This election could well defy the historians predictions. Possibly?


34 posted on 10/18/2004 2:53:47 PM PDT by Illinois Rep
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To: ambrose

A theory on why the internals are kinder to Bush than the who would you vote for question: I think people are disappointed in how the leadup to Iraq created false impressions about WMD and they are mad about it.

How does that anger manifest itself? I think there is a segment of people who are saying they are going to vote for Kerry but in their hearts, they know Bush to be the better leader.

So they answer the internals with much higher praise than would seem appropriate given Bush's overall support number.

When it comes time to pull the trigger on voting day, these votes will either break for Bush or stay home.

Isn't the same the case for poll questions about taxes? When polled people say they don't favor tax cuts but when they vote they are overwhelmingly in favor of them.

I think the same pattern will emerge in this election.

A segment of the "I'm voting for Kerry" people are lodging a soft protest at this stage but many of them will not follow through.

That plus the libs running the polls are cooking their books.


35 posted on 10/18/2004 2:55:26 PM PDT by BigTime
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To: rushmom
Bush leads 52-4l on handling of Iraq but on that issue Kerry leads. Explain that one.

The overall public trust Bush more than Kerry on Iraq, but people who are voting for Kerry consider Iraq their top issue.

36 posted on 10/18/2004 2:56:32 PM PDT by ambrose (http://www.swiftvets.com)
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To: Petronski

Job approval is 53? I wonder if that is 52.5 or 53.4.



MOE makes the decimal irrelevant.


37 posted on 10/18/2004 3:17:23 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your Friendly Freeper Patent Attorney)
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To: clintg

I makes perfect sense. Polls regularly understate Republican strength. FOr example the 1996 polls had CLinton up by 13 against Dole - he won by 8 ...
A Bush lead of 3 in the polls is no "neck and neck", his real performance could be 6-8 point victory.

JA of 53% translates into 53% voting for him -> 6-8 point victory.

JMHO.


38 posted on 10/18/2004 3:18:49 PM PDT by WOSG (George W Bush / Dick Cheney - Right for our Times!)
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To: LS
Trust me, as a history professor, I can tell you that most elections in U.S. history are quite close. Either the pop vote or the EC is usually close. FDR had an electoral blowout in, I think, 1940, but the popular vote was much closer than you would think. Three elections (1884, 1888, and 1892) were decided by a few electoral votes and a small pop vote margin.


Indeed. The very essence of the two-party system leads each to moderate to gain the middle, but not to compromise the core principles so much as to gain a needless excess majority.
39 posted on 10/18/2004 3:19:58 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your Friendly Freeper Patent Attorney)
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To: Beelzebubba

I know that.


40 posted on 10/18/2004 3:28:13 PM PDT by Petronski (I'm not always cranky.)
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