New Polls (June 25-28) | |||
State | Poll | Margin | |
---|---|---|---|
Colorado | Quinnipiac | +2 | |
Kentucky | Rasmussen | +16 | |
Michigan | Quinnipiac | +6 | |
Minnesota | Quinnipiac | +17 | |
Mississippi | Rasmussen | +6 | |
New Jersey | FDU | +16 | |
Ohio | Survey USA | +2 | |
Tennessee | Rasmussen | +15 | |
Texas | Texas Lyceum | +5 | |
Texas | Rasmussen | +9 | |
Wisconsin | Quinnipiac | +13 |
What's worth noting is that, with few exceptions, these polls put the momentum in Obama's direction. Even in the McCain states, where the Illnois senator is (or has been) trailing badly, he has improved upon his standing. States like Kentucky and Tennessee, where McCain had been ahead by more than twenty points for months, have suddenly tightened. And as Nate Silver over at FiveThirtyEight.com has eloquently pointed out within the last few days, history will tell us that the position of the two major candidates in the polls will converage (or settle into position) to some degree, the closer it gets to November and the general election. Even in states like Colorado have seen Obama's lead decrease but hold steady just outside of the margin of error--but still within the range of what we here at FHQ consider to be a toss up.
Changes (June 25-28) | |||
State | Before | After | |
---|---|---|---|
Minnesota | Obama lean | Strong Obama | |
Mississippi | Strong McCain | McCain lean | |
Ohio | Tied | Toss Up Obama | |
Texas | Strong McCain | McCain lean | |
Wisconsin | Toss Up Obama | Obama lean |
And this is the case in the states where changes haven taken place since Wednesday. Obama "took the lead" in Ohio, breaking what had been a tie in our average. Still, Ohio along with Nevada, continues to be the tightest of states at the moment. Both are in Obama's column at the moment but could switch quite easily. Both Texas and Mississippi eased into the McCain lean category after being more solidly in the Arizona senator's favor of late. From the looks of things, neither will be Obama states in November, but the closer they get, the more McCain may be force to play defense in the Lone Star and Magnolia states. Meanwhile, due to the Quinnipiac polls, midwestern neighbors Minnesota and Wisconsin became more solidly blue; switching to Strong Obama and Obama lean states, respectively.
The Watch List* | |||
State | Switch | ||
---|---|---|---|
Alaska | from McCain lean | to Toss Up McCain | |
Georgia | from McCain lean | to Strong McCain | |
Massachusetts | from Obama lean | to Strong Obama | |
Minnesota | from Strong Obama | to Obama lean | |
Mississippi | from McCain lean | to Strong McCain | |
Missouri | from Toss Up McCain | to McCain lean | |
Nevada | from Toss Up Obama | to Toss Up McCain | |
New Mexico | from Toss Up Obama | to Obama lean | |
North Carolina | from McCain lean | to Toss Up McCain | |
Ohio | from Toss Up Obama | to Toss Up McCain | |
Texas | from McCain lean | to Strong McCain | |
Wisconsin | from Obama lean | to Toss Up Obama | |
*Weighted Average within a fraction of a point of changing categories. |
As far as the Watch List is concerned, Alaska joins the list (a glaring omission from the last poll that came out there), and Minnesota, Mississippi, Texas and Wisconsin all made the switches that had them on the list prior to this week. However, they continue to be on the list because a change in the opposite direction is now possible (from Obama lean to Toss Up Obama in Wisconsin, for instance, after the switch from toss up to lean this week.). These twelve states then, are the ones to watch. New polls in any of them could cause a shift in categories.
I'll be back tomorrow with a look at how the polls shift over the course of the month. In other words, we'll examine just how much our electoral college projection has captured the "Obama bounce" since he secured the nomination at the beginning of June.
Recent Posts:
The National Popular Vote Plan...and Other Ways of Reforming the Electoral College
The Electoral College Map (6/25/08)
Vice Presidents Quiz
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHey Josh,
ReplyDeleteI think in the "change" table for Wisconsin you meant to put 'from strong Obama' to 'Obama lean'. Whereas right now you have from 'Obama lean' to 'Obama toss-up'.
Anton and I both mangled that a bit, I think. One more try:
ReplyDeleteThe change table should have Wisconsin as going from Obama toss-up to Obama lean.
Good catch(es). Fixing...
ReplyDeleteAlright, should be fixed now. I looked at that html code for too long last night. Thanks for the correction.
ReplyDeleteHey!!! Where you get that map? :)
ReplyDeleteJames,
ReplyDeleteThe map template comes to FHQ courtesy of Paul Gurian, professor of political science at the University of Georgia.