Daily Tracking polls

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Obama +10 |
October 20, 2008
Gallup Tracking - Monday 10/20
Posted by TOM BEVAN
Today's Gallup results (rolling average from Oct 17-19) shows Barack Obama increasing his lead in its "traditional" likely voter numbers to five points, 50-45, up from three points yesterday (49-46).
In Gallup's new "expanded" likely voter model, Obama's lead stands at nine points, 52 to 43, up two points from yesterday's 51-44:
 

Bad Gas!

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The Hollywood poll:....Hussain Obama 98%...McCain 2%...It looks like Hollywood has groomed there perfect model..Let's listen to rhe rich movie stars from fantasyland!....LOL
 

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) 10/21/08– Democrat Barack Obama has opened an 8-point lead over Republican John McCain two weeks before the U.S. presidential election, according to a Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby poll released on Tuesday.
Obama leads McCain 50 percent to 42 percent among likely U.S. voters in the latest three-day tracking poll, up from a 6-point advantage for Obama on Monday. The telephone poll has a margin of error of 2.9 percentage points.
"It was another very big day for Obama," said pollster John Zogby. "Things clearly are moving in Obama's direction."
It was the second consecutive day that Obama gained ground on McCain as the two head into the final sprint to the November 4 election.
Obama, an Illinois senator, expanded his lead among two key swing groups. His advantage with independent voters grew from 11 to 15 points, and his edge with women voters grew from 8 to 13 points.
 

av8torntn

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What happened? I thought you were going to post us the daily real clear politic tracking poll. It must not fit your fantasy anymore.
 

over9five

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Newest Military Poll - McCain 68% Obama 23%

This poll shows 68% of active duty and retired servicemen and women support John McCain.

Interesting read, I like seeing the break-down of the respondents.
 

The Other Side

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What happened? I thought you were going to post us the daily real clear politic tracking poll. It must not fit your fantasy anymore.


The topic of this thread is daily tracking Poll(S).

This means its open to all polls good or bad. Why dont you post a poll where OBAMA is "plumetting"?
 

av8torntn

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The topic of this thread is daily tracking Poll(S).

This means its open to all polls good or bad. Why dont you post a poll where OBAMA is "plumetting"?

LOL you really are to easy. Ok during a time when you had claimed that the lead for B. Hussein would grow by at least five points here are a few polls.

We have FL where B. Hussein had a four point lead a week earlier. B. Hussein had been campaigning hard here.

SurveyUSA10/16 - 10/16 47 49 McCain +2

How about OH? B. Hussein was up by two last week. Now McCain is up by one. B. Hussein lost 150% of his lead.


NBC/Mason-Dixon10/16 - 10/17 45 46 McCain +1


Here is my state poll.

SurveyUSA02/26 - 02/28 54 41 McCain +13
 

The Other Side

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Todays florida polls:

RCP Average10/11 - 10/19----48.646.6 Obama +2.0

FOX News/Rasmussen10/19 - 10/191000 LV3.04849 McCain +1

SurveyUSA10/16 - 10/16553 LV4.34749 McCain +2

Research 200010/13 - 10/15600 LV4.04945 Obama +4

CNN/Time10/11 - 10/14765 LV3.55146 Obama +5

InAdv/PollPosition10/13 - 10/13612 LV3.84844 Obama +4

Sry AV8, I dont see a plummet among averages. I do see the FOX polling company (Rassmussen) keeping it close, but there polls are always tainted as compared to the 100 poll index.
 

The Other Side

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Todays Ohio polls:

RCP Average10/12 - 10/19----48.345.5Obama +2.8

FOX News/Rasmussen10/19 - 10/191000 LV4.04749McCain +2

Suffolk10/17 - 10/19600 LV4.05142Obama +9

NBC/Mason-Dixon10/16 - 10/17625 LV4.04546McCain +1

SurveyUSA10/12 - 10/13575 LV4.25045Obama +5

Strategic Vision (R)10/06 - 10/081200 LV3.04846Obama +2

ARG10/04 - 10/07600 LV4.04845Obama +3

ABC News/Wash Post10/03 - 10/05772 LV3.55145Obama +6

Columbus Dispatch*09/24 - 10/032262 LV2.04942Obama +7

Democracy Corps (D)09/29 - 10/01600 LV--4943Obama +6

Quinnipiac09/27 - 09/29825 LV3.45042Obama +8

Ive looked at all 100 polls, dont see where McCain is gaining anything except on the FOX polls and thats not surprising. OHIO is going to OBAMA.

FOX and RUSH may tell you different, but the handwriting is on the wall!
 

The Other Side

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LOL you really are to easy. Ok during a time when you had claimed that the lead for B. Hussein would grow by at least five points here are a few polls.

We have FL where B. Hussein had a four point lead a week earlier. B. Hussein had been campaigning hard here.

SurveyUSA10/16 - 10/16 47 49 McCain +2

How about OH? B. Hussein was up by two last week. Now McCain is up by one. B. Hussein lost 150% of his lead.


NBC/Mason-Dixon10/16 - 10/17 45 46 McCain +1

Ok, McCain is up 1 point on one poll...must be the turnaround he was looking for!!! RCP would differ with you however. Both states are still lead by OBAMA using the RCP averages.

Ill go with RCP.

FOX polls can be thrown in the garbage for all there worth.
 

av8torntn

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I showed you how B. Hussein lost his lead plus another 50% in a couple of states and by the way those were from the RCP site. Looks like a steep drop to me. We will see if my theory is correct. Now that B. Hussein has announced that he is leaving the trail for a couple of days look for at least a slight rebound. It sure looks like everytime his puppet masters let him speak we see a drop in his numbers. I would guess they don't let him walk down the street campaigning again any time soon.
 

Bad Gas!

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AP presidential poll: All even in the homestretch

Oct 22 01:23 PM US/Eastern
By LIZ SIDOTI
Associated Press Writer 195 Comments





Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain acknowledges a cheering...



Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks during...



In this image made available by Madame Tussauds Wax Museum in London, Wedn...


WASHINGTON (AP) - The presidential race tightened after the final debate, with John McCain gaining among whites and people earning less than $50,000, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll that shows McCain and Barack Obama essentially running even among likely voters in the election homestretch.
The poll, which found Obama at 44 percent and McCain at 43 percent, supports what some Republicans and Democrats privately have said in recent days: that the race narrowed after the third debate as GOP-leaning voters drifted home to their party and McCain's "Joe the plumber" analogy struck a chord.

Three weeks ago, an AP-GfK survey found that Obama had surged to a seven-point lead over McCain, lifted by voters who thought the Democrat was better suited to lead the nation through its sudden economic crisis.

The contest is still volatile, and the split among voters is apparent less than two weeks before Election Day.

"I trust McCain more, and I do feel that he has more experience in government than Obama. I don't think Obama has been around long enough," said Angela Decker, 44, of La Porte, Ind.

But Karen Judd, 58, of Middleton, Wis., said, "Obama certainly has sufficient qualifications." She said any positive feelings about McCain evaporated with "the outright lying" in TV ads and his choice of running mate Sarah Palin, who "doesn't have the correct skills."

The new AP-GfK head-to-head result is a departure from some, but not all, recent national polls.

Obama and McCain were essentially tied among likely voters in the latest George Washington University Battleground Poll, conducted by Republican strategist Ed Goeas and Democratic pollster Celinda Lake. In other surveys focusing on likely voters, a Washington Post-ABC News poll showed Obama up by 9 percentage points, while a poll by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center had Obama leading by 14. A Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, among the broader category of people registered to vote, found Obama ahead by 10 points.

Polls are snapshots of highly fluid campaigns. In this case, there is a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points; that means Obama could be ahead by as many as 8 points or down by as many as 6. There are many reasons why polls differ, including methods of estimating likely voters and the wording of questions.

Charles Franklin, a University of Wisconsin political science professor and polling authority, said variation between polls occurs, in part, because pollsters interview random samples of people.

"If they all agree, somebody would be doing something terribly wrong," he said of polls. But he also said that surveys generally fall within a few points of each other, adding, "When you get much beyond that, there's something to explain."

The AP-GfK survey included interviews with a large sample of adults including 800 deemed likely to vote. Among all 1,101 adults interviewed, the survey showed Obama ahead 47 percent to 37 percent. He was up by five points among registered voters.

A significant number of the interviews were conducted by dialing a randomly selected sample of cell phone numbers, and thus this poll had a chance to reach voters who were excluded from some other polls.

It was taken over five days from Thursday through Monday, starting the night after the candidates' final debate and ending the day after former Secretary of State Colin Powell broke with the Republican Party to endorse Obama.

McCain's strong showing is partly attributable to his strong debate performance; Thursday was his best night of the survey. Obama's best night was Sunday, hours after the Powell announcement, and the full impact of that endorsement may not have been captured in any surveys yet. Future polling could show whether either of those was merely a support "bounce" or something more lasting.

During their final debate, a feisty McCain repeatedly forced Obama to defend his record, comments and associations. He also used the story of a voter whom the Democrat had met in Ohio, "Joe the plumber," to argue that Obama's tax plan would be bad for working class voters.

"I think when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody," Obama told the man with the last name of Wurzelbacher, who had asked Obama whether his plan to increase taxes on those earning more than $250,000 a year would impede his ability to buy the plumbing company where he works.

On Wednesday, McCain's campaign unveiled a new TV ad that features that Obama quote, and shows different people saying: "I'm Joe the plumber." A man asks: "Obama wants my sweat to pay for his trillion dollars in new spending?"

Since McCain has seized on that line of argument, he has picked up support among white married people and non-college educated whites, the poll shows, while widening his advantage among white men. Black voters still overwhelmingly support Obama.

The Republican also has improved his rating for handling the economy and the financial crisis. Nearly half of likely voters think their taxes will rise under an Obama administration compared with a third who say McCain would raise their taxes.

Since the last AP-GfK survey in late September, McCain also has:

_Posted big gains among likely voters earning under $50,000 a year; he now trails Obama by just 4 percentage points compared with 26 earlier.

_Surged among rural voters; he has an 18-point advantage, up from 4.

_Doubled his advantage among whites who haven't finished college and now leads by 20 points. McCain and Obama are running about even among white college graduates, no change from earlier.

_Made modest gains among whites of both genders, now leading by 22 points among white men and by 7 among white women.

_Improved slightly among whites who are married, now with a 24-point lead.

_Narrowed a gap among unmarried whites, though he still trails by 8 points.

McCain has cut into Obama's advantage on the questions of whom voters trust to handle the economy and the financial crisis. On both, the Democrat now leads by just 6 points, compared with 15 in the previous survey.

Obama still has a larger advantage on other economic measures, with 44 percent saying they think the economy will have improved a year from now if he is elected compared with 34 percent for McCain.

Intensity has increased among McCain's supporters.

A month ago, Obama had more strong supporters than McCain did. Now, the number of excited supporters is about even.

Eight of 10 Democrats are supporting Obama, while nine in 10 Republicans are backing McCain. Independents are about evenly split.

Some 24 percent of likely voters were deemed still persuadable, meaning they were either undecided or said they might switch candidates. Those up-for-grabs voters came about equally from the three categories: undecideds, McCain supporters and Obama backers.

Said John Ormesher, 67, of Dandridge, Tenn.: "I've got respect for them but that's the extent of it. I don't have a whole lot of affinity toward either one of them. They're both part of the same political mess."

___

AP Director of Surveys Trevor Tompson, AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP writer Alan Fram contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.





Click here to buy text ads on Breitbart
 

The Other Side

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Gee, if 30K to 75k earners were the only voters, McCain would be a shoe-in!!!

Also, if catholics made up the electorate, McCain would win by a landslide!!

tOo bAd It aInT tHe CaSE!!

LOL....nice stretch!!:happy-very:

IBD/TIPP is not a scientific national or local poll. Dude, stay with RCP, they havent missed an election since creating the site.
 

av8torntn

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IBD/TIPP is not a scientific national or local poll. Dude, stay with RCP, they havent missed an election since creating the site.

Dudette keep up Tipp is on the RCP site and they were the most accurate during the last election.


About IBD/TIPP: An analysis of Final Certified Results for the 2004 election showed IBD's polling partner, TIPP, was the most accurate pollster of the campaign season. Learn more at www.TIPPonline.com.
 

The Other Side

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This could be bad news for you supporters of B. Hussein. I still think he needs a high turnout to win. It looks like early voting is on par with 2004.

All these polls we have been seeing predict a high turnout of new voters. If this does not happen well I just hate to think what you guys may do to yourselves.

http://www.gallup.com/poll/111430/Early-Voting-Now-11-Could-Reach-30.aspx

This is about the tracking of early voting trends.

AV8, now you know what is like to be in John Kerry Supporter shoes 10 days before an election.

Holding on to a "sliver" of hope despite mounting odds against you..

Dont worry, you'll get over it like we all did. You wont like any of it, just like we have'nt for 8 years.

"WE" as democrats can bodly say "I told you so" with honor and respect.

Nobody, including the staunchest republican believed that their politcal party could bring down the mighty United States to its knees, but here it is for the world to see.

As your beloved right wing loses not only the White House, it will also lose a ton of congressional seats and give the democrats a 60 seat majority.

It appears that despite "low" approval ratings, the american public is ready to toss out more republicans.

The senate seems to be trending the same direction.

Its ok though, you have 10 more days to spread rumors and slander about OBAMA before it all comes to an end.

Negative Campaigning never works in a downturning economy. Too bad Karl Rove did'nt figure that out before he sent John McCain out on a suicide mission.

Just like in nam, he will get shot down and held prisoner by history.:wink2:
 

av8torntn

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AV8, now you know what is like to be in John Kerry Supporter shoes 10 days before an election.

Look I do not support B. Hussein. I suppose you are trying to draw a comparison between B. Hussein and Kerry since they were both ahead in some polls at about this time in the election cycle. Every election is different but then again they are all the same in some ways as well.

http://web.archive.org/web/20131022...y-had-a-10-point-lead-in-13-key-swing-states/

All these polls are a joke and the joke is on you. They mean nothing when you enter the booth to cast your vote.
 
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