McCain's continued strong performance in the national polls (see above) has positive implications for GOP candidates around the country. Obama has a big lead in three large states -- Illinois, New York, and California, as well as huge leads in the District of Columbia, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Connecticut -- and that suggests McCain is doing well in most of the other 44 states. McCain has a decent chance to win PA, OH, VA, FL, MI, MN, and CO -- all battleground states. PA's GOP candidates must emphasize that they are strongly "NoBama." (Above image: McCain, light green, Obama, dark green.)
The Aug. 12-14 polling shows a slight dip in Obama's support, which had ranged between 46% and 48% (averaging 47%) in August. McCain has averaged 43% support among registered voters so far in August. Thus, the closer margin seen in today's results is due more to movement away from Obama than toward McCain. Twelve percent of registered voters now say they are undecided or supporting another candidate, which is on the high end of what Gallup has measured this year.
Voter preferences have been closely divided between Obama and McCain in each of the last three individual nights of polling, underscoring the notion that the race has tightened for the moment. This could to some degree reflect Obama's absence from the campaign trail while he vacations in Hawaii. He will return to the spotlight over the next few weeks upon naming his vice presidential running mate and accepting his party's nomination for president at the Democratic national convention, and both events have typically been associated with a bounce in support for a presidential candidate.
On Thursday, the Obama and Hillary Clinton campaigns announced an agreement to put her name into nomination for president at the convention. Given that the race has been tight for the past few days, it is unlikely this announcement is related to any change in Obama's support.Since early June when Obama clinched the nomination, he has averaged a three percentage point advantage over McCain in Gallup Poll Daily tracking. (To view the complete trend since March 7, 2008, click here.) -- Jeff Jones
Note to readers: Please visit some of my blogs, all updated daily, especially: http://camp2008victorya.blogspot.com, http://hillarysupportersformccain.blogspot.com, and
3 comments:
What I just read now is nothing but a bunch of hokus pokus! Continue wallowing in your pitiable day dreaming!
Come november, when obama must have won hands down, I wonder what you'll write on. Political pundit my foot!
Fast Barry Obambi: Welcome to the Majors!
I can't see how John McCain (R-AZ) could win this year's presidential election since he has consistently trailed Barack Obama (D-IL) throughout much of the campaign nationwide so far, albeit by a close margin overall. If McCain were a Democratic presidential nominee instead of a Republican one, then he would easily be elected the next president, considering how tarnished the GOP brand has become under President George W. Bush (R). Besides, McCain has rarely been a real Republican anyway. When Obama wins this November, GOPers can definitely forget about winning back the White House for several decades to come unless they could truly get their acts together for the long haul. Unfortunately, many future GOP presidential nominees could and/or would end up like the late U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), the 1964 GOP standard-bearer.
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