Alabama: McCain is leading Obama 62 percent to 35 percent with 3 percent preferring someone else and 1 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 8-9. The margin of error is 3.7 percent. McCain leads Obama 76 percent to 21 percent among whites (75 percent of the sample) while Obama leads 82 percent to 16 percent among blacks (22 percent of the sample). A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 22 had McCain ahead 60 percent to 39 percent with 2 percent undecided. The Republicans have carried the state in the last five elections. Safe Republican.
Alaska: McCain is leading 57 percent to 41 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 28. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 63 percent to 37 percent while Obama is viewed unfavorably by 52 percent 48 percent. An Ivan Moore poll conducted Oct. 17-19 had McCain ahead 53 percent to 42 percent with 11 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. McCain had led by 17 points at the beginning of the month. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-16 had McCain ahead 57 percent to 38 percent with 2 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 6 had McCain leading 55 percent to 40 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" that 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. In early September, on the heels of the GOP convention, McCain's lead had shot up to 60 percent to 36 percent. He is viewed favorably by 64 percent of voters while Obama is viewed unfavorably by 51 percent. Republicans have carried this state in the last five elections and did so by 20 points or more except for 1992 when independent Ross Perot siphoned off GOP votes. Safe Republican.
Arizona: McCain is leading Obama 53 percent to 46 percent among likely voters with 1 percent saying "neither" and 1 percent expressing no opinion in a CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28. The margin of error is 3.5 points. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin is 52 percent to 45 percent. An NBC News/Mason-Dixon poll conducted Oct. 27-28 had McCain ahead 48 percent to 44 percent. The margin of error is 4 points.
A Cronkite/Eight poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had McCain ahead 46 percent to 44 percent with 9 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Voters thought by 62 percent to 20 percent that Obama would win the election. The poll found that supporters of both men were highly committed and unlikely to change their votes and the remaining undecided vote was low, so a lot will hang on which campaign does the better job turning out its supporters. "Obama has been closing the gap by attracting independents and women to his campaign. McCain does well among conservative Democrats and evangelicals," the poll said. A Northern Arizona University/University of Washington poll conducted Oct. 18-27 had McCain leading 49 percent to 41 percent with 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 29 had McCain ahead 59 percent to 38 percent in his home state with 1 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided . Republicans have carried Arizona in the last four of five elections. Republican Favored.
Arkansas: McCain is leading Obama 54 percent to 44 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 27. The margin of error is 4.5 percent. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 61 percent to 37 percent while Obama is seen unfavorably by 53 percent and favorably by 46 percent. Voters trust McCain more on the economy by 9 points and on national security by 23 points. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 21-22 had McCain ahead 52 percent to 41 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. Obama's party support was only 72 percent compared to 89 percent for McCain among Republicans and McCain was leading by 23 points among independents. A University of Arkansas poll conducted Oct. 1-21had McCain leading 49 percent to 36 percent with 15 percent undecided or refusing to answer. The margin of error was 2.5 percent. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 20-22 had McCain ahead 53 percent to 41 percent with 5 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4 points. Republicans have carried the state in three of the last five elections with the exception predictably being the two years in which favorite son Bill Clinton was the candidate. Leans Republican.
California: Obama is leading McCain 55 percent to 33 percent with 4 percent preferring "other" and 8 percent expressing no opinion in a Field Poll conducted Oct. 18-28. Field says that if Obama's lead holds, it would represent the biggest winning margin of any presidential candidate in the state since World War 2, including Lyndon Johnson's landslide victory over Barry Goldwater in 1964. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 25 had Obama ahead 61 percent to 34 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 67 percent to 30 percent while McCain was viewed unfavorably by 54 percent and favorably by 44 percent. A Public Policy Institute of California poll conducted Oct. 12-19 had Obama leading 56 percent to 33 percent with 2 percent preferring someone else and 9 percent undecided. Of the last five elections, Democrats easily won each since 1992, following Michael Dukakis' loss to the first George Bush in 1988. Safe Democrat.
Colorado: Obama is leading McCain 51 percent to 45 percent among likely voters with 2 percent and 2 percent undecided in a Marist University poll conducted Oct. 27-28. The margin of error is 3.5 points. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin is 53 percent to 42 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 56 percent to 40 percent and McCain's is 51 percent to 44 percent. An Allstate/National Journal poll conducted Oct. 23-27 has Obama ahead 48 percent to 44 percent among registered voters with 3 percent undecided. Voters trust Obama more to handle the current financial crisis by 9 points and is statistically tied with McCain on who is more prepared to lead the country. Voters say Obama better understands their needs and priorities by 16 points and they say Obama more than McCain has the personal skills and qualities to succeed as President by 9 points. The margin of error is 4.9 percent. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28 had Obama ahead 53 percent to 45 percent, double his lead of two weeks ago in this survey. "Older voters in Colorado have started to break Obama's way." CNN Polling Director Keating Holland said. Obama is also being helped by a 15-point Democratic lead in Colorado's fast-growing suburbs, the poll said. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama ahead 50 percent to 41 percent among likely voters with 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.9 percent. Voters trust Obama more to improve the economy by 8 points and handle the financial crisis by 7 points. The two are roughly tied on national security. Fifty-one percent say Obama has kept his promise to run a positive campaign while 71 percent say McCain has not. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 26 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 46 percent with 1 percent for Ralph Nader and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 55 percent to 44 percent while McCain's was 54 percent to 46 percent. Voters trusted Obama more on the economy by 7 points and McCain more on national security by 2 points. A Rocky Mountain News/CBS4 News poll conducted Oct. 21-23 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 40 percent. The margin of error was 4.38 points. The poll said the biggest shift to Obama was among independents, who outnumber Republicans in the state. Obama leads among them by 58 percent to 27 percent compared to his 2 point advantage in this poll in August. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 11-14 had Obama leading McCain 51 percent to 47 percent. The margin of error was 3.5 points. Obama is leading McCain 51 percent to 47 percent in A Wall Street Journal/Washington Post/Quinnipiac University poll conducted Oct. 8-12 had Obama leading 52 percent to 43 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Obama ran about evenly with McCain among men but led by 16 points among women. Independents favored Obama by 9 points. Fifty-four percent of Coloradans said the economy was the most important issue and Obama led among them by 12 points while voters said by a 12 point margin that McCain better understands foreign policy. Fifty-one percent said Sarah Palin is not qualified to be vice president. The state has gone Republican the last three elections (by less than 5 points in 2004), but the Obama camp thinks they can make it competitive. Leans Democratic.
Connecticut: Obama is leading McCain 59 percent to 37 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 13-14. Democrats have won four of the last five elections here. Democrat Favored.
Delaware: Obama is leading McCain 56 percent to 41 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 10. the margin of error is 4.5 percent. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Sept. 22-23 had Obama ahead 57 percent to 37 percent in Joseph Biden's home state with 3 percent preferring someone else and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.7 percent. Delaware has gone Democratic in the last four of five elections. Safe Democrat.
District of Columbia: Obama leads McCain 82 percent to 13 percent with 4 percent undecided in an American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 11-13. The District has gone Democratic in the past five elections. Safe Democrat.
Florida: Obama is statistically tied with McCain at 45 percent to 44 percent among registered voters with 5 percent undecided in an Allstate/National Journal poll conducted Oct. 23-27. The margin of error is 4.9 percent. Voters trust Obama more to handle the current financial crisis by 8 points while McCain leads by 4 points on who is more prepared to lead the country. Voters say Obama better understands their needs and priorities by 14 points and they say Obama more than McCain has the personal skills and qualities to succeed as President by 8 points. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28 had Obama ahead 51 percent to 47 percent. A Quinnipiac University poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama statistically tied with McCain at 47 percent to 45 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error is 2.6 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 53 percent to 37 percent while McCain's is 55 percent to 38 percent. McCain leads among men by 5 points and Obama among women by 8 points. "The reason Sen. McCain is doing better in Florida than some other key states is his strength among white voters without college degrees. He leads Sen. Obama by 18 points among that group in Florida, but is neck and neck with him among such voters in and Pennsylvania," said Quinnipiac's Peter Brown. McCain leads by 13 points among white voters. Obama leads by 8 points among independents. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama ahead 45 percent to 43 percent with 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr, 1 percent for Ralph Nader and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 points. Voters trust Obama more to improve the economy by 9 points and to handle the financial crisis by 4 points.They say by a 10 point margin that Obama better understands how the financial crisis is affecting Americans. They favor McCain on national security issues by 7 points. A Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll conducted Oct. 25-27 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 43 percent among likely voters with 1 percent preferring someone else and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Voters felt positive about Obama by 53 percent to 35 percent compared to 46 percent to 40 percent for McCain. The poll found Sarah Palin to be a drag on the ticket except for core McCain constituencies. Voters thought Obama would do a better job handling the financial crisis by 46 percent to 37 percent and, on handling the economy in general, nearly have trusted Obama compared to 39 percent for McCain. McCain, as in most polls, scores higher than Obama on Iraq and terrorism. Voters said by 58 percent to 30 percent that Obama had the better temperament to be President. A Suffolk University poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had Obama ahead 49 percent to 44 percent among likely voters. The margin of error was 4 percent. Among "very likely" voters, that lead dropped to 1 point. Suffolk said that two counties it regards as bellwethers - Hillsborough, which includes the Tampa Bay-St. Petersburg area, and Monroe, which includes the Florida Keys - show "telltale signs of the race tightening." Regardless of who they support, Floridians believe by 60 percent to 31 percent that Obama will be elected President. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 26 has Obama ahead 51 percent to 47 percent with 1 percent undecided. last week, McCain led by 1 point. Obama's favorable to unfavorable numbers are 55 percent to 45 percent while McCain's are 57 percent to 41 percent. Voters favor Obama on the economy by 6 points and McCain on national security by 7 points. A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 has Obama ahead 47.2 percent to 46.9 percent with 5.9 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4.1 points. Obama has a huge 64 percent to 25 percent lead among independents but McCain is winning 16 percent of Democrats compared to Obama's 10 percent of Republicans. A Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 20-22 had McCain statistically tied with Obama at 48 percent to 46 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 49 percent to 40 percent while McCain's was 48 percent to 42 percent. Voters said Obama would be best able to handle the economy by 10 points and, by 9 points, that McCain would best handle Iraq. A St. Petersburg Times, Bay News 9 and the Miami Herald poll conducted Oct. 20-22 had Obama leading 49 percent to 42 percent. The margin of error was 3.5 percent. Obama's surge was fueled by independent voters who are now backing him by a 2-to-1 margin. About half of all voters and 6 of 10 independents said Obama had a better plan to deal with the economy and that, by 45 percent to 34 percent, he had shown the most leadership on the issue. McCain and Obama were in a dead heat among senior citizens with 11 percent still undecided. Republicans have carried the state in four of the last five elections including, of course, the hotly-contested outcome in 2000 where the state was awarded to George Bush by a hair. No clear favorite.
Georgia: McCain is leading Obama 52 percent to 47 percent in a CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 22 had McCain ahead 51 percent to 46 percent with 3 percent undecided. McCain's previous lead in this poll had been 9 points. The margin of error was 4.5 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 57 percent to 42 percent while Obama was seen unfavorably by 51 percent and favorably by 48 percent. Voters truste McCain more than Obama by 3 points on the economy and 7 points on national security. A Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 20-22 has McCain ahead 51 percent to 45 percent with 2 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 49 percent to 37 percent while Obama's is 48 percent to 39 percent. McCain leads by 3 points on who voters think would better handle the economy and by 14 points on who would best handle Iraq. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-15 had McCain ahead 49 percent to 43 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. McCain led 72 percent to 21 percent among white voters (66 percent of the sample) while Obama led among blacks (27 percent of the sample) by 91 percent to 5 percent. The only time in the last five elections that Republicans have not won this state was in 1992 when Bill Clinton eked out a victory by less than a point, thanks to the competition George Bush got from independent Ross Perot. Republican Favored.
Hawaii: In the state where he was born, Obama leads McCain 68 percent to 27 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 23. The margin of error is 4 points. Hawaii has been solidly Democratic in the last five elections. Safe Democrat.
Idaho: McCain leads Obama 68 percent to 26 percent with 6 percent undecided in an American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 8-10. A a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 9 had McCain ahead 68 percent to 29 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 3 percent. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Idaho has voted with the GOP in the past five elections. Safe Republican.
Illinois: Home state candidate Obama leads McCain 61.2 percent to 31.6 percent with 1.6 percent choosing "other" and 4.2 percent undecided in a Big Ten Battleground poll conducted Oct. 16-19. Voters here believe that Obama can better bring about change by more than 3-to-1. But they regard McCain as more experienced by 66.8 percent to 24.1 percent. A Chicago Tribune poll conducted Oct. 16-18 had Obama ahead 56 percent to 32 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 9 percent undecided. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 13 had Obama ahead 56 percent to 39 percent with 5 percent undecided. Democrats have carried the state in the last four elections. Illinois went Republican in the six before those. Safe Democrat.
Indiana: McCain is leaning Obama 49 percent to 46 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 4 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 29. The margin of error is 4.5 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable numbers are 57 percent to 40 percent while Obama's are 49 percent to 48 percent. Voters trust McCain more to handle the economy by 3 points and national security by 14 points. An Indianapolis Star-WTHR poll conducted Oct. 26-28 has Obama statistically tied with McCain at 45.9 percent to 45.3 percent. The margin of error is 4 points. One in five voters say they could still change their minds. Obama is getting more than twice as much support as McCain among the 525,000 new voters signed up since 2006. Mccain leads among white voters as does Obama among blacks, and pollster Ann Selzer says, "This race is really in the hands of your African-American community." A Howey/Gauge poll conducted Oct. 23-24 had McCain leading Obama 47 percent to 45 percent. The margin of error was 4.1 percent. This poll said 32 percent of voters who backed Hillary Clinton in the state's primary were supporting McCain. McCain led among white voters by 53 percent to 39 percent and Howey/Gauge says if "Obama can bring his white voter support up into the mid-40s, it could be a path to victory." A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had McCain ahead 50.2 percent to 44 percent with 5.8 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.1 points. McCain had a 15 point lead among independents. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 21-22 had Obama leading 49 percent to 45 percent with 3 percent preferring "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Compared to its poll of a month ago, that put Obama up 4 points and McCain down by 3 points. McCain led by 13 points among men and Obama by the same margin among women. He had a 15 point lead among voters under 34 with all other age groups relatively close. Independents favored Obama by 8. Republicans have carried the state in the last five elections, and the only year where their margin of victory was less than 15 points was 1996 when independent Ross Perot got 10 percent of the vote. No Clear Favorite.
Iowa: Obama is leading McCain 52 percent to 42 percent among likely voters with 1 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided in a Marist University poll conducted Oct. 23--24. The margin of error is 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 57 percent to 37 percent while McCain's is 50 percent to 42 percent. A Research 2000 poll conduced Oct. 19-22 had Obama ahead 54 percent to 39 percent with 4 percent undecided in. The margin of error is 4 points. Voters trusted Obama more to handle the economy by 20 points and to cut taxes by 7 points. Obama led among independents by 21 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 23 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 44 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 56 percent to 44 percent while McCain's was 51 percent to 48 percent. Voters trusted Obama more on the economy by 8 points and McCain more on Iraq by 8 points. A Big Ten Battleground poll conducted Oct. 16-19 had Obama ahead 52.4 percent to 39.1 percent with 1.8 percent preferring someone else and 5.7 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 64.2 percent to 32.8 percent while McCain's was 49.1 percent to 47.3 percent. Voters believed 61.5 percent to 25 .4 percent that Obama, not McCain, could bring about change. They regarded McCain as the more experienced by 71.7 percent to 21.6 percent. Iowa has gone Democratic in 4 of the last 5 elections, but George Bush's victory in 2004 and Al Gore's win in 2000 were each by less than a point. Democrat Favored.
Kansas: McCain is leading 53 percent to 41 percent with 4 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 21-22. The margin of error is 4 percent. McCain leads in all age and gender groups, but Obama leads by 7 points among independents who make up 21 percent of the sample. That said, McCain has 83 percent support among Republicans who comprise 47 percent of the sample while Obama gets 76 percent among Democrats, who represent 32 percent. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 13 had McCain holding a double-digit lead here but one that was down 7 points from mid-September. He was ahead by 54 percent to 41 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 65 percent to 33 percent while Obama was viewed unfavorably by 53 percent and favorably by 46 percent. Forty-nine percent of Kansas say McCain was more in tune with the needs of the state compared to 36 percent for Obama. Voters trusted McCain more to solve the current economic crisis by 51 percent to 38 percent. On general management of the economy, voters favored McCain 53 percent to 41 percent. They trusted McCain more by 60 percent to 34 percent on national security issues. Republicans have carried this state by double-digits in the last 5 elections except for 1992 when Ross Perot's candidacy siphoned votes from the first George Bush and reduced his margin of victory. Safe Republican.
Kentucky: McCain is leading Obama 55 percent to 43 percent with 2 percent choosing other and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 21. The margin of error is 4.5 percent. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 64 percent to 35 percent, while Obama is viewed unfavorably by 54 percent and favorably by 45 percent. Voters here trust McCain more on the issues of the economy and national security by double-digit figures. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 29 had McCain ahead 55 percent to 39 percent. The margin of error was 4 points. Twelve percent of voters said the fact Obama is black made them less likely to vote for him compared to 5 percent who said it would make them more likely to do so. Eight-three percent said race didn't matter. "Let's not be naïve. Race is a factor with Obama. But is it costing him winning the state? No. There are a lot of other factors at work," said Del Ali of Research 2000. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 18-20 had McCain ahead 54 percent to 41 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.3 percent. McCain led among men by 22 points and among whites by 17 points. Republicans have carried three of the five last elections with the exceptions being the two won by Bill Clinton. Safe Republican.
Louisiana: McCain is leading Obama 50.6 percent to 38.3 percent with 1.7 percent preferring someone else and 9.5 percent undecided or refusing to answer in a Southeastern Louisian University poll conducted Oct. 20-23. The margin of error is 4.46 percent. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 21 had McCain ahead 57 percent to 41 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. McCain's favorability rating topped Obama's 64 percent to 45 percent, and voters trusted him more than Obama on both economic and national security issues. Louisiana has gone Republican in three of the last five elections with the string broken in 1992 and 1996 by Bill Clinton. Republican Favored.
Maine: Obama is leading McCain 56 percent to 35 percent with 9 percent undecided in a Critical Insights poll conducted Oc t. 16-19. The margin of error is 4.7 percent. ASurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 19-20 had Obama ahead 54 percent to 39 percent lead over McCain with 3 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.9 percent. Last month, Obama led by 5 points in this poll. He had a 23 point lead among women voters and a 15 point advantage among younger voters who make up 19 percent of the sample. McCain led by 16 among voters over 65 who made up 20 percent of the sample. Obama led by 10 points among independents. Democrats have won the last four out of five elections here. Leans Democratic.
Maryland: Obama leads McCain 60 percent to 37 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 20. The margin of error is 4.5 percent. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 17-19 had Obama ahead 54 percent to 39 percent with 6 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 points. Democrats have carried the state in four of the last five elections. Safe Democrat.
Massachusetts: Obama is leading McCain 59 percent to 35 percent with 5 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 13-14. Massachusetts has gone Democratic in the five last elections and the only time the margin was less than double-digits was the 1988 George Bush-Michael Dukakis contest. Safe Democrat.
Michigan Obama is leading McCain 53 percent to 43 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 28. The margin of error is 4.5 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 58 percent to 40 percent while McCain's is 53 percent to 46 percent. Voters trust Obama more than McCain to handle the economy by 13 points and McCain leads by 1 point on national security issues. An EPIC-MRA poll conducted Oct. 19-22 had ahead 51 percent to 37 percent in. The margin of error is 5 points. A Big Ten Battleground poll conducted Oct. 16-19 had Obama ahead 58.1 percent to 35.8 percent with .9 percent preferring someone else and 3.3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable numbers were 67.4 percent to 30.2 percent while McCain was viewed unfavorably by 49.8 percent and favorably by 47.2 percent. Voters believed that Obama, more than McCain can bring about change by 67.4 percent to 23.4 percent. They saw McCain as the more experienced by 69 percent to 22.7 percent. Michigan has gone Democratic in the last four of five elections with the only Republican to win being the first George Bush in 1988. Democrat Favored.
Minnesota: Obama is leading McCain 56 percent to 37 percent with 7 percent undecided or unknown in a Minnesota Public Radio/Humphrey Institute poll conducted Oct. 24-28. The margin of error is 4.25 points. "There's really no evidence here that McCain has been able to overcome the basic hurdles that he started the campaign with which is that the economy is working for Barack Obama," said University of Minnesota political science professor Larry Jacobs. "The financial crisis played just into the Obama strategy that the country is headed in the wrong direction. That's a view shared by more than eight out of 10 Minnesota voters. That's breaking decisively for Obama." Obama has a large lead among independents and a 33 point lead among voters earning less than $50,000 which suggests that McCain's "Joe the Plumber" appeal has not worked. An NBC News/Mason-Dixon poll conducted Oct. 27-28 has Obama ahead 48 percent to 40 percent. The margin of error is 4 points.
A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 28 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 43 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 61 percent to 38 percent while McCain's was 54 percent to 46 percent. Voters trust Obama more on the economy by 9 points and the two are even on national security.
A Big Ten Battleground poll conducted Oct. 16-19 had Obama ahead 57.3 percent to 37.9 percent with 1.4 percent choosing "other" and 2.3 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 67.4 percent to 30.5 percent while McCain was seen unfavorably by 49.2 percent and favorably by 47.3 percent. Voters believed that Obama was the better candidate to bring about change by 63.1 percent to 26.5 percent. They said McCain was the more experienced by 72.9 percent to 18.7 percent. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 16-18 showed Obama leading 50 percent to 44 percent with 4 percent preferring "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.9 percent. One of the voter swings was among voters older than 50 among whom McCain led by 4 points just after the GOP convention and who favored Obama in this survey by 12. McCain also lost ground among independents among whom he had led by 9 points in early September and now trailed by 6 points. A Minneapolis Star Tribune poll conducted Oct. 16-17 had Obama ahead among likely voters 52 percent to 41 percent. Voters said Obama would do a better job in handling the economy, which they regarded as the top issue, by 20 points. Democrats have carried the state in the last five elections, but by only 3.5 percent in 2004 and 2.4 percent in 2000. Democrat Favored.
Mississippi: McCain is leading Obama 53 percent to 45 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 27. The margin of error is 4.5 percent. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 58 percent to 41 percent while Obama is seen unfavorably by 51 percent and favorably by 48 percent. Voters trust McCain more than Obama on the economy by 8 points and by 11 points on national security. McCain has a huge 70 percent to 17 percent lead among unaffiliated voters. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-15 had McCain ahead 50 percent to 40 percent with 3 percent preferring someone else and 7 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. McCain led among white voters (62 percent of the sample) by 78 percent to 15 percent while Obama led among black (37 percentof the sample) 82 percent to 4 percent. Republicans have carried the state in the last five presidential elections. Safe Republican.
Missouri: Obama is leading McCain 48.2 percent to 45.7 percent with 6.2 percent undecided in a Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26. The margin of error is 4.1 points. McCain leads by 11 and 10 points respectively among white voters and those over 65 while Obama leads by 12 points among independents. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 26 had Obama ahead 48 percent to 47 percent, with 2 percent for Ralph Nader, 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3 points. That's a gain of 4 points from McCain since last week. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 53 percent to 47 percent while McCain's is 57 percent to 40 percent.. Voters trusted Obama more on the economy by 2 points, down from 7 points last week, and McCain on national security by 11 points, up from 7 points last week. The two are essentially tied among unaffiliated voters among whom Obama last week had a 14 point lead. A Suffolk University poll conducted Oct. 17-19 had McCain statistically tied with Obama at 45 percent to 44 percent. The margin of error was 4 points. McCain's "Joe the Plumber" sally during the final debate and the coverage that followed made 8o percent aware of him, but only 8 percent more likely to vote for McCain. As far as voter motivation in their choices, 73 percent of Obama supporters said they were backing him because he was their preferred choice compared to 66 percent for McCain. Twenty-one percent of McCain supporters were mainly opposed to Obama while 14 percent of Obama backers chose him more because they don't want McCain. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 17 had Obama leading 52 percent to 46 percent with 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable numbers were 56 percent to 43 percent while McCain's were 57 percent to 43 percent. Republicans have won 7 of the last 10 elections here with George Bush winning by about 7 points and 3 points in 2004 and 2000, and Clinton winning by about 6 in 1996 and about 11 in 1992. No Clear Favorite.
Montana: McCain is leading Obama 50 percent to 46 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 29. The margin of error is 4 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 53 percent to 45 percent while Obama is seen unfavorably by 50 percent and favorably by 49 percent. The two are statistically tied on who voters trust more to handle the economy while McCain leads by 6 points on national security. An NBC/Mason-Dixon poll published Oct. 28 had McCain ahead 48 percent to 44 percent. AMontana State University poll conducted Oct. 16-20 had Obama ahead 44.4 percent to 40.2 percent with 4.2 percent for Ron Paul and 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 9.5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 5 percent. Obama was leading among independents by almost 8 points. Ron Paul was pulling 11.8 percent of his support from Republicans. A plurality of 43.4 percent of voters said McCain was running the most negative campaign and a plurality (47.6 percent) also said Obama would do the best job managing the economy. Nearly 52 percent said McCain would do the best job of managing foreign policy. This is a state the Republicans have carried in all the last five elections except 1992 when Independent Ross Perot spoiled things for the first George Bush. No Clear Favorite.
Nebraska: McCain leads Obama 56 percent to 37 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 4 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 30. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 12-17 had McCain ahead 60 percent to 34 percent with 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. Republicans have won all five of the last presidential elections here. Safe Republican.
Nevada: Obama is leading McCain 52 percent to 45 percent among likely voters with 2 percent saying "neither" and 1 percent expressing no opinion in a CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28. The margin of error is 4 point. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin is 52 percent to 45 percent. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 had Obama ahead 53 percent to 42 percent among likely voters with 1 percent each for Libertarian Bob Barr and Ralph Nader and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.9 percent. Nevadans trusted Obama more to handle the economy by 16 points and by 13 points on managing the financial crisis. They named Obama by 20 points over McCain as the candidate who understood how the financial crisis was affecting Americans. They gave Obama a 4 point edge on national security issues. Fifty-one percent said Obama has kept his pledge to run a positive campaign 72 percent said McCain has not. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 27 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 46 percent. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 51 percent to 48 percent while McCain's was 53 percent to 45 percent. The two are statistically tied on who voters trusted more on the economy and McCain led by 10 points on national security issues. A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had Obama ahead 48.2 percent to 44 percent with 7.8 percent undecided. The margin of error wass 4.1 points. Obama led by 10 points among women and 14 points among independents while McCain had leads of 10 points and 11 points respectively among white voters and those over 65. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 19-21 had Obama ahead 51 percent to 46 percent. The margin of error is 3.5 percent. A Mason-Dixon poll conducted Oct. 8-9 had Obama statistically tied with McCain at 47 percent to 45 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. This poll in August had McCain ahead by 7 points. "Since that time, the undecided number has shrunk by 9 percent and pretty much the entire swing has gone to Obama," political scientist Mark Peplowski told the Las Vegas Review Journal. Unless something happens to take the focus off the dismal state of the economy, he said, he would expect the trend to continue to favor Obama. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 3-6 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 43 percent with 4 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Republicans have won three of the last five elections here although each one since 1996 has been decided by four points or less. Leans Democratic.
New Hampshire: Obama is leading McCain 53 percent to 40 percent in a Suffolk University poll conducted Oct. 27-29. the margin of error is 4 points. Obama's strength comes from his big advantage among women where he leads McCain 60 percent to 35 percent. "If John McCain were hoping women would rally to help him steal a victory in New Hampshire, as they did for Hillary Clinton, those hopes may be dashed," said David Paleologos, the poll's director. Obama also has a 21 point lead among independents.An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 37 percent with 1 percent for Ralph Nader and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. Voters trusted Obama more to improve the economy by 22 points and to handle the financial crisis by 22 points. By 20 points, they said he better understood how the financial crisis was affecting Americans. The two were roughly tied on national security issues. Forty-six percent said Obama has kept his pledge to run a positive campaign while 71 percent said McCain has not. A WMUR/University of New Hampshire poll conducted Oct. 26-28 has Obama ahead 58 percent to 34 percent with 7 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.8 points. An NBC/Mason-Dixon poll published Oct. 28 had Obama leading 50 percent to 39 percent. A WMUR/University of New Hampshire poll conducted Oct. 24-26 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 39 percent with 2 percent preferring someone else and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.7 percent. A Marist College poll conducted Oct. 22-23 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 45 percent among likely voters with 2 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 57 percent to 38 percent while McCain's is 56 percent to 4 percent. That was a 6 point drop in the favorable column for Obama since September and a 5 point fall-off for McCain. A Boston Globe poll conducted Oct. 18-22 had Obama ahead 54 percent to 39 percent with 6 percent undecided or preferring someone else. The margin of error was 3.5 points. "McCain certainly has his back to the wall in New Hampshire," said Andrew Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, which conducted the poll. "The economic crisis in September and October has changed the mood of voters in New Hampshire, who are now solidly backing Obama as the candidate best able to deal with economic issues." Other factors hurting McCain is that the Bush administration's unpopularity is proving to be an albatross, Sarah Palin is becoming increasingly unpopular and McCain's campaign is seen as too negative. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 23 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 46 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 55 percent to 43 percent while McCain's was 56 percent to 43 percent. Voters trusted Obama by just 1 point and McCain led him by 10 on handling Iraq. Democrats have carried the state three times and the GOP twice in the last five elections, but the outcomes in 2000 and 2004, with victories for George Bush and John Kerry respectively, were decided by about 2 points or less. Leans Democratic.
New Jersey: Obama is leading McCain 54 percent to 38 percent in a Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 26-28. Voters said by 20 points that Obama was best suited to handle the economy while favoring McCain by 3 points on national security. Sarah Palin is seen unfavorably by 54 percent of voters and favorably by 37 percent. Eleven percent said their impression of Palin changed after seeing the Tina Fey impersonation of her on Saturday Night Live. A Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 24-26 had Obama ahead 53 to 38 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 7 percent undecided. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 54 percent to 37 percent while McCain's was 48 percent to 38 percent. A Monmouth University/Gannett poll conducted Oct. 15-18 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 38 percent among likely voters with 1 percent preferring "other" and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.7 percent. Obama's lead was 19 points if the sample was registered voters. Obama had led by 8 points last month. The poll said Obama's gains came from a 16 point swing in his favor among men and his popularity with younger voters. Poll director Patrick Murray said, "At this point, it would take an October surprise of astronomical proportions to turn New Jersey from blue to red." A Quinnipiac University poll conducted Oct. 16-19 has Obama ahead 59 percent to 36 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 5 percent undecided. Democrats have won the last four presidential elections here, and Republicans the six before that. Democrat Favored.
New Mexico: Obama is leading McCain 54 percent to 44 percent with 2 percent preferring someone else and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 28. The margin of error is 4.5 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 57 percent to 42 percent while McCain is seen unfavorably by 50 percent and favorably by 49 percent. Voters trust Obama more on the economy by 11 points and by 3 points on national security. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 12-13Obama is leading McCain 52 percent to 45 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.2 percent. McCain led 55 percent to 42 percent among white voters (61 percent of the sample) while Obama led 71 percent to 26 percent among Hispanics (31 percent of the sample). The last two elections here were settled by less than a one point margin: the Republicans won in 2004 and the Democrats in 2000. Leans Democrat.
New York: Obama is leading McCain 57 percent to 37 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 4 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 14. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 11-12 had Obama ahead 64 percent to 31 percent with 4 percent preferring someone else and 1 percent undecided. A Siena Research Institute poll conducted Sept. 28-30 had Obama leading 58 percent to 36 percent with 6 percent expressing no opinion. The margin of error was 3.9 percent. In its September poll, Siena had McCain within 5 points. More than half of New Yorkers have an unfavorable opinion of Sarah Palin. Democrats have carried all five of the last presidential elections here with the only one where a Republican was in shouting distance was 1988 when Michael Dukakis beat George Bush by about 4 points. Safe Democrat.
North Carolina: Obama is statistically tied with McCain 50 percent to 48 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 29. The margin of error is 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 53 percent to 46 percent while McCain's is 56 percent to 43 percent. The two are statistically tied on who voters trust more to handle the economy while McCain has a 6 point lead when it comes to national security. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 46 percent among likely voters with 1 percent choosing "neither." The margin of error was 4 points. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin was 50 percent to 47 percent. An Allstate/National Journal poll conducted Oct. 23-27 had Obama leading 47 percent to 43 percent among registered voters with 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.9 percent. Voters trusted Obama more to handle the current financial crisis by 9 points and was statistically tied with McCain on who is more prepared to lead the country. Voters said Obama better understands their needs and priorities by 16 points and they said Obama more than McCain had the personal skills and qualities to succeed as President by 11 points. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 had Obama statistically tied with McCain at 48 percent to 46 percent. The margin of error was 4 percent. Voters trusted Obama more to improve the economy by 6 points and to handle the financial crisis by 6 points. They said by 13 points Obama better understands how the financial crisis is affecting Americans. They gave McCain a 5 point edge on national security issues. Fifty-six percent said Obama has kept his pledge to run a positive campaign while 61 percent said McCain has not. An NBC/Mason-Dixon poll published Oct. 28 had Obama and McCain are tied at 47 percent. A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had Obama ahead 49.7 percent to 46.4 percent with 3.9 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.1 points. Independents favored Obama by 21 points. McCain led by 27 points among whites so "African-American turnout may decide who squeaks by," Zogby said. A Public Policy Polling survey conducted Oct. 25-26 had Obama statistically tied with McCain at 49 percent to 48 percent with 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 2.8 percent. McCain expanded his lead among white voters from 55 percent to 39 percent in PPP's last poll to 60 percent to 36 percent. He also increased the number of Democrats he is drawing by 5 points to 19 percent. Obama has a 12 point lead among independents. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 26 had McCain ahead 49 percent to 48 percent. The previous poll had Obama up by 3 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 52 percent to 47 percent while McCain's is 59 percent to 40 percent. The two are tied when it comes to who voters trust more to handle the economy and McCain is judged best to handle national security by 13 points. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 19-21 had Obama ahead 51 percent to 47 percent. The margin of error was 4 percent. In the previous survey two weeks ago, they were tied. "The North Carolina poll exhibits the same gender gap and generation gap that national polls typically show," CNN Polling Director Keating Holland said. "McCain has a slight edge among men and voters over 50 years old; Obama has a slightly bigger margin among women and younger voters." A Winthrop/ETV poll conducted Sept. 28- Oct. 19 had Obama and McCain statistically tied at 44.6 percent to 44.2 percent with 1.9 percent preferring someone else and 7 percent undecided. Voters favored Obama on the issue of economy by 9 points and on health care by 16 points. On Iraq, they favored McCain by 11 points. A [Civitas Institute poll] conducted Oct. 18-20 had Obama ahead 48 percent to 45 percent among likely voters with 2 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 7 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.2 percent. Without leaners, Obama would have had a 5 point lead. "Since John McCain has begun to campaign in North Carolina, his numbers seem to be improving," said Francis De Luca, Executive Director of the Civitas Institute. "He's been able to pick up two points on Obama in the past two weeks according to our polling." Republicans have carried this state in the last five elections. No Clear Favorite.
North Dakota: What is going on in this traditional Republican stronghold? McCain is tied with Obama at 45 percent each with 3 percent preferring someone else and 7 percent undecided in a Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-15. Obama leads by 7 points among independents who comprise 30 percent of the sample. A Minnesota State University survey conducted Oct. 6-8Obama is leading McCain in this traditionally Republican state by 45 percent to 43 percent. Obama has eaten into McCain's once comfortable lead because of the economy, an issue on which voters favored him 49 percent to 38 percent. The poll also said, "McCain has failed to solidify his hold on the GOP base in North Dakota, where he has the support of just 73 percent of voters identifying themselves as strong Republicans." In the state's February caucuses, Mitt Romney beat McCain and McCain barely finished ahead of Ron Paul. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 15-17 had McCain ahead 52 percent to 43 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 4 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. North Dakota has gone Republican in the last 10 elections and George Bush carried the state by 27 points in 2000 and 2004.No Clear Favorite.
Ohio: Obama is leading McCain 51 percent to 47 percent among likely voters with 1 percent choosing neither, 1 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent expressing no opinion in a CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28. The margin of error is 3 percent. Among all registered voters, Obama leads 53 percent to 43 percent. An Allstate/National Journal poll conducted Oct. 23-27 has Obama ahead 48 percent to 41 percent among registered voters with 6 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4.9 percent. Voters trust Obama more to handle the current financial crisis by 7 points and while McCain leads by 5 points on who is more prepared to lead the country. Voters say Obama better understands their needs and priorities by 18 points and they say Obama more than McCain has the personal skills and qualities to succeed as President by 11 points. A Quinnipiac University poll conducted Oct. 22-26 had ahead 51 percent to 42 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 7 percent undecided. The margin of error was 2.6 percent. The two split the white vote and Obama overwhelmingly led among black voters. Independents favored Obama by 12 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 55 percent to 34 percent while McCain's was 51 percent to 42 percent. "The Obama campaign has worried for months about winning Ohio's white working-class voters, including those who had been with Sen. Hillary Clinton in the primary. Obama's ability to be competitive with that group is why he is ahead. He's only losing one in five Clinton voters and is within two points of Sen. McCain among whites without college degrees. That's a recipe for Obama success," said Quinnipiac's Peter Brown. A Marist College poll conducted Oct. 24-26 had Obama 46 percent to 43 percent among registered voters with 1 percent preferring someone else and 10 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.5 percent. The size of Obama's margin is the same among likely voters. Obama has a 9 point lead among independents. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 56 percent to 37 percent while McCain's is 51 percent to 44 percent. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama ahead 48 percent to 41 percent with 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 points. Ohioans say by a 9 point margin that they trust Obama more to improve the economy and handle the financial crisis. They say by 15 points that he better understands how the financial crisis is affecting Americans. They favor McCain by 5 points on national security. Fifty-three percent say Obama has kept his pledge to run a positive campaign while 63 percent say McCain has not. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 26-27 had Obama ahead 49 percent to 45 percent with 4 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3.9 percent. The two ran evenly among men but Obama led by 8 points among women. He led by 18 points among voters under 34 who made up 22 percent of the sample with the margin in all other age groups being close or equal. McCain led by 6 points among white voters(86 percent of the sample) while Obama's margin among blacks (11 percent of the sample) was 84 percent to 12 percent. A Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll conducted Oct. 25-27 had Obama ahead 49 percent to 40 percent with 3 percent preferring someone else and 8 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3 points. The poll said that Obama's effort to depict a McCain administration as one that would be equivalent to a third term for President Bush appeared to be resonating with voters saying 54 percent to 38 percent that they believed McCain would continue Bush's policies. Voters said they trusted Obama more than McCain to make better decisions on the economy and financial crisis by 12 points and 15 points respectively. They trusted McCain more to achieve success in Iraq by 9 points and to protect the country from terrorism by 18 points. A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 had Obama 49.7 percent to 45.1 percent with 5.3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's edge may be his 16 point lead among independents. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 26 has Obama ahead 49 percent to 45 percent with 1 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr and 4 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3 points. McCain led by 2 in last week's poll. Obama's favorable to unfavorable numbers are 52 percent to 45 percent while McCain's are 56 percent to 41 percent. Voters trust Obama more on the economy by 4 points and McCain on national security by 13 points. An Ohio Newspaper Poll conducted Oct. 18-22 had Obama ahead 49 percent to 46 percent with 3 percent undecided in. The margin of error is 3.3 percent. Obama's support increased in this poll since it was started in September while McCain's declined 2 points. However, the poll noted that the race was "volatile" because 11 percent of voters said they could change their minds. "It is very possible that 2008 could be a repeat of 2004, when the race for Ohio was decided by just 2 percentage points," said Eric Rademacher of the University of Cincinnati. A Public Policy Polling survey conducted Oct. 21-23 has Obama ahead 51 percent to 44 percent with 5 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.1 percent. PPP attributes Obama's lead to a 12 point advantage among independents, bring back into the fold supporters of Hillary Clinton, running competitively with McCain among whites while leading 89 percent to 8 percent among the 12 percent of the sample who are black, and leading by 36 percent among voters under 29 (16 percent of the sample). In stark contrast to other recent polls, McCain led Obama 48 percent to 45 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided in a Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 20-22. The margin of error was 3 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 48 percent to 42 percent, while Obama's was 49 percent to 41 percent. Voters prefer Obama by 12 points on handling the economy and say, by 9 points, McCain would better handle Iraq. Republicans have won Ohio in three of the last five elections, but the margin of victory in 2000 and 2004 was 2.5 percent or less. Leans Democratic.
Oklahoma: McCain is leading Obama 59 percent to 35 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 18-19. An Oklahoma City News 9 poll conducted Oct. 4-5 had McCain ahead 65.5 percent to 29.1 percent with 5.4 percent undecided. Republicans have carried the state in the past five elections. Safe Republican.
Oregon: Obama is leading 57 percent to 38 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 25-26. A Riley Research poll conducted Oct. 10-20 had Obama leading 48 percent to 43 percent with 18 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.39 percent.
A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-15 had Obama ahead 53 percent to 38 percent with 4 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 14 had Obama leading 54 percent to 41 percent with 2 percent preferring "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable rating was 57 percent to 42 percent while McCain's was 50 percent to 49 percent. Fifty-one percent said Obama's campaign has been generally positive while 50 percent said McCain's has been generally negative. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 11-12 had Obama leading 57 percent to 40 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 1 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.1 points. The Democrats have carried the state in the last five elections although Al Gore won it in 2000 by less than half a point. Democrat Favored.
Pennsylvania: Obama is leading McCain 55 percent to 43 percent among likely voters with 1 percent saying "neither" and 1 percent expressing no opinion in a CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28. The margin of error is 3.5 percent. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin is 56 percent to 41 percent. An NBC News/Mason-Dixon poll conducted Oct. 27-28 had Obama ahead 47 percent to 43 percent. The margin of error is 4 points.
A Quinnipiac University poll conducted Oct. 22-26 had Obama leading 53 percent to 41 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 2.7 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 59 percent to 33 percent while McCain's was 50 percent to 43 percent. A plurality of voters viewed Sarah Palin unfavorably. Obama had a 24 point lead among women while McCain had a 3 point lead among men. The two split the white vote. Independents favored Obama by 19 points. "Pennsylvania is consistently Obama blue down the home stretch, even with white voters only narrowly in his corner. Sen. Barack Obama's big lead over Sen. John McCain in the critical southeast Philadelphia suburbs - the key to the Keystone State in recent elections - should seal up Pennsylvania for Obama," said Quinnipiac's Clay F. Richards. A Marist College poll conducted Oct. 24-26 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 39 percent among registered voters with 9 percent undecided. Among likely voters, Obama does 1 point better. The margin of error is 3.5 percent. Obama is running more than 2-to-1 ahead among independents. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 59 percent to 34 percent while McCain's is 50 percent to 44 percent. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama ahead 52 percent to 40 percent with 1 percent each for Libertarian Bob Barr and Ralph Nader and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 percent. Voters trust Obama more to improve the economy and handle the financial crisis by 15 points. They say by the same margin that he better understands than McCain how the financial crisis is affecting Americans. They give Obama a 3 point edge on national security issues. Fifty-six percent say Obama has kept his promise to run a positive campaign while 65 percent say McCain has not. A Franklin & Marshall poll conducted Oct. 21-26 had Obama ahead 51 percent to 39 percent among registered voters with 2 percent preferring other and 9 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.5 percent. Among likely voters, Obama leads 53 percent to 40 percent, with a margin of error of 4.2 percent. Obama holds sizable leads among young voters, non-whites college graduates and women. McCain maintains a narrow edge among white working class voters but his margin among white men overall has shrunk from 11 points in September to 4 points. Obama's favorable ratings have increased from 49 percent to 53 percent while McCain's have fallen slightly from 48 percent to 45 percent. Independents favor Obama by 14 points. Voters say by 61 percent to 29 percent that Obama best understands the concerns of ordinary Americans and by 52 percent to 37 percent is best able to handle the economy. McCain leads 57 percent to 31 percent on the question of who has the experience needed to be President. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 27 had Obama leading 53 percent to 46 percent with 1 percent choosing "other." The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable numbers were 56 percent to 43 percent while McCain's were 54 percent to 43 percent. Voters trusted Obama more on the economy by 7 points and McCain more on national security by 4 points. The Temple Poll conducted Oct. 20-26 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 41 percent among likely voters with 8 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 3.6 percent. The Muhlenberg College/Morning Call daily tracking poll conducted Oct. 20-24 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 41 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 52 percent to 34 percent compared to 43 percent who saw McCain unfavorably and 41 percent who viewed him positively. A Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 20-22 had Obama ahead 50 percent to 43 percent with 2 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 48 percent to 39 percent, the same as McCain's. Voters preferred Obama by 9 points on handling the economy and McCain by 8 points on handling Iraq. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 21-22 had Obama ahead McCain 53 percent to 41 percent with 4 percent choosing other and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. SurveyUSA said "There is movement to McCain among white voters, where McCain had been down 7, today is down 3." McCain led by 12 points among men while Obama had the same lead among women. Obama led by 25 points among voters 18 to 34, who make up 21 percent of the sample, and this was not offset as in some other states by a big McCain lead among seniors. This key state was won by Democrats in the last two elections, but by 4 points or less each time. Democrat Favored.
Rhode Island: Obama leads McCain 58 percent to 39 percent with 3 percent undecided in a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 13. An American Research Group survey conducted Sept. 11-13 puts Obama's lead at 59 percent to 33 percent with 8 percent undecided. Democrats have won the last five elections here by margins ranging from 12 to 29 points. Safe Democrat.
South Carolina: McCain is leading Obama 53 percent to 42 percent in an NBC News/Princeton Research poll conducted Oct. 25-28. the margin of error is 4 points. A Winthrop/ETV poll conducted Sept. 28- Oct. 19 had McCain leading 55.1 percent to 34.9 percent with 1.6 percent preferring someone else and 6.6 percent undecided. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 18McCain is leading Obama 51 percent to 45 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Republicans have carried the state in the last five elections. Safe Republican.
South Dakota: McCain is leading Obama 50 percent to 41 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 6 percent undecided in a Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 22-24. The margin of error is 4 points. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 19-21 had McCain ahead 55 percent to 39 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 9 had McCain ahead 54 percent to 37 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. In July, they were in a statistical tie in this poll. Republicans have carried the state in the last five elections. Safe Republican.
Tennessee: McCain is leading Obama 54 percent to 38 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 5 percent undecided in a Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 21-22. The margin of error is 4 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 29 had McCain ahead 58 percent to 39 percent with 1 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. A Middle Tennessee State University poll conducted Sept. 15-27 had McCain ahead 48 percent to 36 percent with 10 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. That figure was for all adults. When the survey was limited to likely voters, McCain led by 20 points. Republicans won three of the last five elections here with the two losses to Bill Clinton and Al Gore in 1992 and 1996. Republican Favored.
Texas: McCain is leading Obama 49.3 percent to 38 percent among registered voters with 1.3 percent for Libertarian Bob Barr, 2 percent choosing "other" and 8.7 percent undecided in a University of Texas poll conducted Oct. 15-22. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 21 had McCain ahead 54 percent to 44 percent with 1 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4.5 points. McCain's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 66 percent to 33 percent while Obama was seen unfavorably by 52 percent and favorably by 47 percent. Voters here trust McCain more by large margins both on the economy and national security. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-15 had McCain ahead 52 percent to 40 percent with 4 percent choosing "other" and 4 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. An American Research Group poll conducted Oct. 5-8 had McCain leading 57 percent to 38 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 4 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Republicans have comfortably carried the state in all of the last five elections. Safe Republican.
Utah: McCain leads Obama 65 percent to 29 percent with 6 percent undecided in an American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 10-13. The margin of error is 4 points. Republicans have carried the state by margins ranging from 16 to 45 points in the last five elections. Safe Republican.
Vermont: Obama is leading McCain 57 percent to 36 percent in a Research 2000 poll published Oct. 27. An American Research Group poll conducted Sept. 18-22 had Obama ahead 56 percent to 38 percent with 1 percent preferring "other" and 5 percent undecided . The margin of error was 4 points. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Sept. 13 had Obama ahead 60 percent to 36 percent with 4 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4 percent. A Research 2000 poll published by WCAX-TV Sept. 15 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 36 percent with 9 percent undecided. Vermont has voted Democratic in the last four of five elections. Safe Democrat.
Virginia: Obama is leading McCain 51 percent to 47 percent among likely voters with 2 percent undecided in a Marist University poll conducted Oct. 26-27. the margin of error is 3.5 percent. Among all registered voters, Obama's margin is 49 percent to 43 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 61 percent to 35 percent while McCain's is 54 percent to 39 percent. An Allstate/National Journal poll conducted Oct. 23-27 has Obama ahead 48 percent to 44 percent among registered voters with 3 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4.9 percent. Voters trust Obama more to handle the current financial crisis by 7 points and is statistically tied with McCain on who is more prepared to lead the country. Voters say Obama better understands their needs and priorities by 16 points and they say Obama more than McCain has the personal skills and qualities to succeed as President by 9 points. A CNN/Time/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 23-28 had Obama ahead 53 percent to 44 percent. An Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Oct. 22-26 has Obama leading 49 percent to 42 percent with 1 percent for Ralph Nader and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 percent. Voters trust Obama more to improve the economy by 13 points and to handle the financial crisis by 10 points. They say by 17 points that he better understands how the financial crisis is affecting Americans. The two are roughly tied on national security issues. Fifty-four percent say Obama has kept his promise to run a positive campaign while 65 percent say McCain has not. A Fox News/Rasmussen Reports poll had Obama leading 51 percent to 47 percent with 2 percent undecided. The margin of error was 3 points. Obama and McCain had the same favorable to unfavorable ratio: 55 percent to 44 percent. Voters trusted Obama more to handle the economy by 5 points and McCain to better handle national security by 1 point. A Washington Post/ABC News poll conducted Oct. 22-25 has Obama ahead 52 percent to 44 percent. The margin of error is 3.5 points. Late last month, Obama's margin was 3 points. Obama leads by 23 points when it comes to who voters think better understand their financial problems and by 15 points in this tax-conscious state on who they trust more on tax policy. Voters are evenly split between the two on handling Iraq and terrorism. A Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26 has Obama leading 52 percent to 44.8 percent with 3.2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4.1 points. Obama is riding a lead of more than 20 points northern Virginia, a suburb of Washington D.C. A SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 25-26 has Obama ahead 52 percent to 43 percent with 3 percent preferring someone else and 2 percent undecided. The margin of error is 3.9 percent. Some of the biggest margins in Obama's favor include a 13 point lead among women and a 26 point lead among voters under 34 (a quarter of the sample). McCain leads 53 percent to 42 percent among white voters (74 percent of the sample) but Obama leads 86 percent to 13 percent among blacks (18 percent of the sample). Obama had led by 6 in SurveyUSA's Oct. 18-19 poll. A Public Policy Polling survey conducted Oct. 21-23 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 43 percent with 5 percent undecided. The margin of error was 2.8 percent. PPP gave these reasons for Obama's lead: he was ahead by 9 points among independents who made up 26 percent of the sample, he was holding on to Democratic votes that Republicans had sometimes siphoned off in past elections, and he was behind McCain by only 53 percent to 42 percent among white voters when he probably only needed to take 39 percent. PPP's Dean Debnam said Obama "is running away with Virginia." Republicans won the last five presidential elections here. A Democratic nominee has not carried this state since 1964. CQ Politics rates this race Leans Democrat.
Washington State: Obama is leading McCain 56 percent to 39 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 26-27. The margin of error is 4 points. Obama is running 11 points stronger than John Kerry did in 2004 and Al Gore did in 2000. A University of Washington poll conducted Oct. 18-27 had Obama ahead 55 percent to 34 percent with 5 percent preferring other candidates and 6 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 percent. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 22 had Obama ahead 53 percent to 43 percent with 2 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided . The margin of error was 4.5 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 61 percent to 38 percent, while McCain's was 56 percent to 43 percent. Voters trusted Obama more to manage the economy by 11 points and McCain had a 1 point edge when it came to Iraq and terrorism. Democrats have carried the state in the last 5 elections although Michael Dukakis defeated the first George Bush here in 1988 by less than 2 points. Democrat Favored.
West Virginia: McCain is leading Obama 50.3 percent to 40.4 percent with 9.3 percent undecided in a Reuters/Zogby poll conducted Oct. 23-26. The margin of error is 4.1 points. McCain is winning 28 percent of Democrats and leads 16 points among independents. A Wesleyan College poll conducted Oct. 20-21 had McCain ahead 49.2 percent to 43.5 percent with 4.3 percent saying they would vote for neither and 3 percent undecided in. The margin of error was 4 points. That was a 5 point gain for Obama since last month. Wesleyan said, "Race remains a key factor in voting preferences. Like the earlier survey, 15.2 percent of the respondents report that race is very or somewhat important in playing a part as to whom to support for President." A CNN/Times/Opinion Research poll conducted Oct. 19-21 had McCain ahead 53 percent to 44 percent. The margin of error was 4 points. An NBC/Mason-Dixon poll conducted Oct. 16-17 had McCain ahead 41 percent to 47 percent. The margin of error was 4 points. McCain led Obama 44 percent to 41 percent when it came to who the voters think could better handle the economy. A Public Policy Polling survey conducted Oct. 16-17 has McCain ahead 50 percent to 42 percent with 8 percent undecided. The margin of error is 2.8 percent. Unlike most other competitive states in PPP polls where over 60 percent of voters cite the economy as the top issue and is giving Obama the advantage, it is cited by 54 percent of voters here with 15 percent calling moral and family values the top issue. McCain leads 87 percent to 7 percent among them. Republicans won here in 2000 and 2004 while Democrats carried the state in the three elections before that. Leans Republican.
Wisconsin: Obama is leading McCain 50 percent to 41 percent with 2 perrcent choosing "other" and 7 percent undecided in a Strategic Vision poll conducted Oct. 24-26. The margin of error is 3 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 52 percent to 42 percent while McCain's is 47 percent to 44 percent. Obama is favored by 12 points on the issue of the economy while McCain edges him by 2 points on who would better handle Iraq. A Rasmussen Reports poll conducted Oct. 23 had Obama leading 51 percent to 44 percent with 1 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 57 percent to 42 percent while McCain's was 51 percent to 48 percent. Voters trusted Obama more on the economy by 7 points and McCain on national security issues by 4 points. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 20-21 had Obama ahead 52 percent to 41 percent with 4 percent choosing "other" and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio was 59 percent to 33 percent. Both McCain and Sarah Palin were seen unfavorably, by 47 percent to 43 percent and 49 percent to 41 percent respectively. Voters trusted Obama more to handle the economy by 58 percent to 31 percent. Obama led McCain by 13 points or more on being seen as honesty and trustworthy and better understanding the problems of Americans while McCain nosed Obama by 2 points on the ability to handle unexpected crises. A Big Ten Battleground Poll conducted Oct. 16-19 has Obama ahead 52.9 to 40.5 percent with 3.7 percent undecided. The margin of error is 4 points. Obama's favorable to unfavorable ratio is 64.6 percent to 32.4 percent while McCain's is 54.5 percent to 42.5 percent. Voters believe Obama can better bring about change by 58.4 percent to 27.1 percent. They regard McCain as more experienced by 73.3 percent to 20.5 percent. Obama was ahead 51 percent to 38 percent with 4 percent preferring someone else and 5 percent undecided in a survey for Wisconsin Public Radio conducted Oct. 9-17. The margin of error is 5 points. Obama leads McCain by 23 points on handling the economy and 19 points on fixing the problems with the nation's financial institutions. McCain leads by 13 points on national security and 4 points on Iraq, but Obama bests him by 7 points on handling an unexpected major crisis. Voters say by 56 percent to 38 percent that Sarah Palin is not prepared to be President. Democrats have carried the state in the last five elections, but by less than one point in 2004 and 2000. Democrat Favored.
Wyoming: McCain is leading Obama 58 percent to 37 percent with 3 percent choosing "other" and 2 percent undecided in a SurveyUSA poll conducted Oct. 18-19. A Research 2000 poll conducted Oct. 14-16 had McCain ahead 58 percent to 35 percent with 4 percent preferring someone else and 3 percent undecided. The margin of error was 4.5 percent. Republicans have carried the state in the last five elections. Safe Republican.
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