CE Recovery Week #4: “Close Contests in Four Key States”




Economy Jumps as Top Voter Concern

By Chris Cillizza
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 23, 2008

The presidential race between John McCain and Barack Obama in four key battleground states remains remarkably stable despite a month of politically significant developments, with the Illinois senator running ahead of or even with his Republican rival according to polling conducted by Quinnipiac University for washingtonpost.com and the Wall Street Journal.

In Colorado, Obama takes 49 percent to 45 percent for McCain while in Michigan Obama stands at 48 percent as compared to 44 percent for McCain. The contest in Minnesota, once considered a lock for Obama, is also quite close with Obama at 47 percent and McCain 45 percent. Only in Wisconsin does Obama have an edge — 49 percent to 42 percent — outside the statistical margin of error for the poll.

Those results are remarkably similar to data from July Quinnipiac polls in each of the four states and suggest that despite the massive media coverage surrounding the two parties’ national nominating conventions as well as the vice presidential selections — especially that of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, which many presumed would alter the campaign’s dynamic — little has changed in the race for the White House.

The upheaval in financial markets has crystallized the importance of the economy in each of the four states where it is, by far, the most important issue for voters. The results are most pronounced in Michigan, whose economy has been badly crippled with the collapse of its manufacturing and auto industries. Nearly six in ten voters in the Wolverine State cited the economy as the most important issue in their vote; the war in Iraq trailed far behind (12 percent) as did energy policy (10 percent). In each of the other three states more than half of voters named the economy as the most critical issue in the election.

The surveys are part of a four-month long effort to measure voter sentiment in key battleground states that could determine the outcome of the race. The path to the presidency runs through a handful of closely contested states, and the four states surveyed in this project provide a snapshot of where things stand with a little more than a month until Election Day.

The stasis in Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin is reflective of a broader national trend that — after several weeks of considerable fluctuation especially following the choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as McCain’s running mate — has returned to a ballast point with Obama holding a narrow national edge over McCain in most polling.

The latest Gallup tracking poll released Monday put Obama at 48 percent to 44 percent for McCain while a similar tracking survey from Diageo and the Hotline put Obama at 47 percent and McCain at 42 percent.

The closeness of the contest suggests that the 2008 election could well be a carbon copy of the narrow decisions in 2004 and 2000 when George W. Bush eked out victories over his Democratic challengers thanks to wins in the delegate treasure troves of Ohio and Florida, respectively.

Obama’s efforts to expand the playing field have met with mixed results as he has pulled staff out of several states like Georgia, Alaska and North Dakota but remains competitive in several others that have been Republican redoubts in recent years.

In Colorado, where Democrats have made significant gains at the state and federal level in recent years, Obama looks well positioned to be the first Democrat since Bill Clinton in 1992 to claim the Rocky Mountain State. Democratic Rep. Mark Udall holds a 48 percent to 40 percent edge over former Republican Rep. Bob Schaffer in the state’s open seat Senate race. In the closely contested Minnesota Senate race, GOP Sen. Norm Coleman holds a 49 percent to 42 percent edge over comedian Al Franken.

Virginia, too, looks like a potential pickup for Obama. A new Washington Post survey puts the Illinois Senator at 49 percent while McCain receives 46 percent. If Obama wins the Commonwealth, he would be the first Democrat to do so since Lyndon Johnson in 1964.

While McCain’s pick of Palin — and the resultant flood of press coverage — was painted as a game-changing moment in the campaign, there is a little evidence that the Alaska governor has fundamentally altered the contest.

Nearly six in ten voters in each of the four states said that the vice presidential picks “have little to do with” their presidential vote. That number was highest in Wisconsin (65 percent) and lowest in Colorado (58 percent).

Despite the lack of influence on voting patterns, both Palin and Delaware Sen. Joe Biden were widely regarded as strong picks by voters in all four states. Palin’s high water mark was in Wisconsin where 57 percent said she was a “good choice” while just 33 percent said she had been a “bad choice.” In both Colorado and Minnesota, 52 percent of those tested said Biden had been a “good choice” as vice president.

And, McCain’s attempt to shift his message from one of experience to one of change does not appear to be resonating in the battleground states yet. In each the four states polled nearly twice as many voters said that Obama is the “candidate who will bring change” as say the same of McCain.

McCain does, however, enter the first presidential debate — centered on foreign policy matters — with a clear edge over Obama. More than six in ten voters in each of the four states said McCain “better understands” foreign policy matters — including more than three in ten self-identified Democrats. The debate will take place Friday at the University of Mississippi at 9 p.m. ET.

The four polls were in the field from Sept. 14-21. The sample of likely voters varied by state: Michigan 1,364, Minnesota 1,301, Wisconsin 1,313, Colorado 1,418.

Published in: on September 23, 2008 at 7:41 am Comments (2)
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  1. on September 24, 2008 at 8:50 am tyler madsen Said:

    This year certainly looks like it will be a close Presidential race. With a current average of 47% for Obama and 44% for McCain, votes in either direction could be decisive. The upcoming Presidential debates will hopefully bring light to the indecision, and voters will then be certain of who they plan on voting for. Nothing is certain; we can assume nothing until after the election.
    A primary point seems to be the economy. Who might be able to bring the nation out of this crisis? Of course, it isn’t so much of a crisis as the fateful stock market crash of the 1930s that everyone remembers as the Great Depression. Since then, legislation has provided measures to prevent the United States from plunging into another such depression. However, the economy will be greatly influenced by the next president’s decisions.
    The war in Iraq, of course, constantly remains a topic of concern, but as neither presidential candidate has said for certain the action which they plan on taking, the topic has laid low because of the inability for people to vote for a candidate whose position on the matter is uncertain. Perhaps the presidential debates will again bring this controversy to light.
    Without proper knowledge as to the positions of each candidate in relation to the hot topics amongst this nation’s people, voters are unable to cast their opinion in one direction or another. The upcoming presidential debates will help bring defcisiveness to the current situation.

  2. on September 25, 2008 at 9:14 pm Timmy Lentz Said:

    Wow. What an amazingly close presidential race this is shaping up to be. Even though Obama is ahead (but barely ahead) in Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, anything could change within the next month. The smart choice of Palin didn’t really help McCain or harm him in the race with Obama. I figured that the pick of Palin would’ve helped out McCain’s number more than where they are at now. Because McCain has declared to not be present at the first of three presidential debates, even though it doesn’t say it on here, and help out at Wall St., I think this could potentially help McCain a lot. It will only benefit McCain if the economy gets better before November; otherwise I believe Obama has a pretty good chance of keeping those battleground states and winning the presidency. With as close as the polls are, a couple votes could change the numbers up. Hopefully nothing will happen like Florida in the 2000 presidential election. If that were to happen, I’m not sure just how much longer our electoral college would exist. Obama is definitely breaking barriers in certain states, winning them where many previous democrats haven’t, showing that he does have change planned.

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