Post Biden announcement poll: The race is tied up

blackascoal

The Force is With Me
DENVER, Colorado (CNN) -- It's a dead heat in the race for the White House.

Both John McCain and Barack Obama had the support of 47 percent of people questioned in the CNN poll.

The first national poll conducted after Barack Obama publicly named Joe Biden as his running mate suggests that the battle for the presidency between the Illinois senator and John McCain is all tied up.

In a new CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll released Sunday night, 47 percent of those questioned are backing Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominees, with an equal amount supporting his Republican opponent, McCain.

"This looks like a step backward for Obama, who had a 51 to 44 percent advantage last month," said CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. "Even last week, just before his choice of Joe Biden as his running mate became known, most polls tended to show Obama with a single-digit advantage over McCain."

So what's the difference now?

It may be supporters of Hillary Clinton, who still would prefer the New York senator and former first lady as the Democratic Party's presidential nominee. Watch are Clinton backers on board? »

Sixty-six percent of Clinton supporters -- registered Democrats who want Clinton as the nominee -- are now backing Obama. That's down from 75 percent in the end of June. Twenty-seven percent of them now say they'll support McCain, up from 16 percent in late June.

"The number of Clinton Democrats who say they would vote for McCain has gone up 11 points since June, enough to account for most, although not all, of the support McCain has gained in that time," Holland said.

Clinton and Obama battled throughout the primary season, with Clinton winning more than 40 percent of the delegates. She suspended her bid for the White House and backed Obama in early June, after the end of primary season.

The majority of registered voters, 54 percent, say Obama's choice of Biden, D-Delaware, as his running mate is an "excellent" or "good decision." That number jumps to 73 percent when just asked of registered Democrats. But it drops to 59 percent when narrowed to Clinton supporters.

"It's not that there's anything wrong with the choice of Joe Biden. A majority rate the Biden selection as excellent or pretty good. Voters think he is qualified to be president, and with the exception of Al Gore in 1992, the public ranks Biden as the most qualified running mate in recent times," Holland said.

"A lot of Americans don't know who he is, but his favorable rating is 13 points higher than his unfavorables. But Biden is not Hillary Clinton, and it's possible that is enough to have moved some of her supporters away from the Democratic ticket, at least temporarily," says Holland.

Among all Democrats, only 38 percent say Obama should have selected Clinton as his running mate.

Still, 74 percent of all voters questioned in the survey said Obama's selection of Biden as a running mate won't have any effect on their vote for president.

The poll was conducted on Saturday and Sunday, with 1,023 adult Americans questioned by telephone. The survey's sampling error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points for all voters. For registered Democrats, it is plus or minus 4.5 percentage points, and for Democrats who still support Clinton for the party's nomination, it is plus or minus 7.5 percentage points.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/08/24/election.2008.poll/index.html
 
Obama just likes drama, he is going to win.
But if your questioning someone for being in DC to long, why go with this fossil.
Why, come Obama wants to hear Biden say who his Daddy is.
 
I wouldn't read too much into that poll. Most people don't know who Biden is. They need more than a day to get to know him. Obama will be up by 7 points (at least) by the end of the week.
 
VP don't matter
Bidden will provide much needed comedy
Also Barrack needs a father figure, just like in the Ill Senate
 
I wouldn't read too much into that poll. Most people don't know who Biden is. They need more than a day to get to know him. Obama will be up by 7 points (at least) by the end of the week.
If all he gets is a 7 point bump by weeks end, he needs to make sure that his office is cleaned when he goes back to the senate.
 
Tomato, to-mah-to

McCain, Obama

Not much difference except in one area that I see. Whoever "wins" will eventually lose given the attitude of this country's politics. I like both but prefer neither.
 
If all he gets is a 7 point bump by weeks end, he needs to make sure that his office is cleaned when he goes back to the senate.

Like a Watergate type cleaning?

I still believe Obama is the frontrunner here, so you could be correct. Especially given the fact that I think Biden was his best option. I am interested to see who McCain ends up with. Given his use of Bidens comments against Obama, I am starting to think he may NOT go with Romney as I had believed.
 
I don't think it will be Romney either. I am wondering exactly who it will be though.......and, will it be a woman?
 
I don't think it will be Romney either. I am wondering exactly who it will be though.......and, will it be a woman?

Damo mentioned Sarah Palin from AK a while back. The more I look at her political views the more I like that pick. I doubt he goes this way, but maybe. She is the only woman I can see him selecting.
 
Polls don't include the 18 yr olds and the early 20 somethings that wouldn't normally vote who will come out in record numbers to vote Obama....
 
Polls don't include the 18 yr olds and the early 20 somethings that wouldn't normally vote who will come out in record numbers to vote Obama....

A good point, many younger voters do not have home phones anymore and most cells are not targeted by pollsters.

That said, I will believe it when it happens. (the young coming out in great numbers) They are by far the least reliable demographic when it comes to showing up to vote.
 
They showed up and swung Missouri for Obama - the youth contingent.

Really? Because I thought the total percent under 25 yrs old was about the same as it always was. I could be wrong... they might show for the national. If they do it will certainly give Obama a big boost. I just don't think they will. I think as always they will get bored with politics and forget to vote again.
 
Really? Because I thought the total percent under 25 yrs old was about the same as it always was. I could be wrong... they might show for the national. If they do it will certainly give Obama a big boost. I just don't think they will. I think as always they will get bored with politics and forget to vote again.

I left myself a note on the kitchen bar to remind me to vote when I get home from work today. Got a friend running for Sheriff and don't want to forget to vote for him. I do forget sometimes in local races.....but I'm not young though. ;)
 
Polls don't include the 18 yr olds and the early 20 somethings that wouldn't normally vote who will come out in record numbers to vote Obama....

People that don't usually vote don't do so because they don't believe in the politics of the candidates. Obama has proven himself to be just another sorry-ass politician who doesn't believe in anything but him winning. We'll see how many are inspired by his same ol' sorry ass politics.

He had a movement and he abandoned it.
 
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