Hot Air Mobile
Home The Vault Gear About
Hot Air -- get your fill


Gallup: Obama now leads by 10 among both traditional and “expanded” likely voters

posted at 3:00 pm on November 1, 2008 by Allahpundit
Share on Facebook | printer-friendly

Zog says McCain +1, Gallup says Obama +10, and Rasmussen splits the difference. Whatever happens, someone’s getting their face rubbed in a pile of warm shinola on Wednesday morning. Nate Silver thinks he knows which one it’ll be. We’ll do more of this on Monday, but here’s CNN’s interactive electoral vote feature in case you want to try mapping out scenarios. As things stand, McCain has to take all six toss-up states plus Pennsylvania plus one other state to win.

Let’s enjoy the left’s suffering now, while we can.

“Look, I have this sense of impending doom; we’ve had a couple of elections stolen already,” Mr. Downs said. “The only thing worse than losing is to think that you’re going to win and then lose.”

He considers that prospect and mutters, almost involuntarily, “Oh, God.”…

Ms. Kuhlman shakes her head and says, “If he doesn’t get this, I’ll be crying so hard.”

A young woman, Shana Rosen, walks by. She is from Denver and said she had told her boyfriend that their love life was on hold while she sweated out Mr. Obama’s performance in Colorado. Ask Lucy Slurzberg, an Upper West Side psychotherapist, how many of her liberal patients speak of their electoral fears during their sessions, and she answers: “Oh, only about 90 percent of them.”…

For many liberals, the chance to elect Mr. Obama, who would be the nation’s first black president, gives the United States a second chance to walk across the stage of world history. (Which also makes the possibility of his loss unspeakably more depressing; given his present lead in every poll, many liberals fear that race will explain any defeat.)

I offer you your optimistic metaphor of the day. No explanation necessary.


Blowback

Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.

Trackbacks/Pings

Trackback URL

Comments

Comment pages: 1 2 3 ... 7

We’re going to win.

capitalist piglet on November 1, 2008 at 3:02 PM

Nate Silver thinks he knows which one it’ll be.

Nate Silver is an admitted Democratic voter and Barack Obama supporter. Of course he’s not going to buy Zogby, despite the fact that Zogby got it right in 2004.

amerpundit on November 1, 2008 at 3:04 PM

As things stand, McCain has to take all six toss-up states plus Pennsylvania plus one other state to win.

So whats the problem?

Limerick on November 1, 2008 at 3:04 PM

Now I don’t know what to think. Who is right and who is wrong? The polls can’t be so diffrent. It’s a nightmare. And I was so happy when I saw the Zgoby post. :(
By the way, phone rang earlier. Recorded poll question. I cannot vote so I didn’t answer.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:07 PM

McCain will win. Consider this poll denounced!

Lehosh on November 1, 2008 at 3:07 PM

I heard on ABC radio yesterday that white males are traditionally republican voters. I forgot the percentage they used. However, this year, only 9% of white male voters were voting for McCain. I find that impossible to believe.

Blake on November 1, 2008 at 3:08 PM

As things stand, McCain has to take all six toss-up states plus Pennsylvania plus one other state to win.

I’ll probably eat crow for this on Wednesday, but I’m not entirely convinced that Virginia is going blue. Nor am I convinced that Nevada is.

amerpundit on November 1, 2008 at 3:08 PM

OMGZ!!! WE’RE ALL DOOOOOOOOOMED!

DON’T VOTE ON NOV 4!!! It’s a lost cause!!!!

eleventy!

It's Vintage, Duh on November 1, 2008 at 3:09 PM

Bullsh*t! McCain is going to win and kick this ass clown down!!!!!!

Winebabe on November 1, 2008 at 3:10 PM

I hope these pollsters are made to look like idiots on Tuesday, along with the MSM.

VanPalin on November 1, 2008 at 3:10 PM

Oh goody! I was going to wait a couple of hours to vote for Obama, but now that I know Obama is safe I’ll start celebrating and drinking tonight. Wake me up Wednesday morning. Yippee!

Obama 08′
Cuz he’s so keewwwl :)

El_Terrible on November 1, 2008 at 3:11 PM

The video reinforces one of my rules for voting:
When given the choice, always vote for the pilot over the non-pilot.

DarkCurrent on November 1, 2008 at 3:12 PM

Whatever happens, someone’s getting their face rubbed in a pile of warm shinola on Wednesday morning.

I’m stocking up on popcorn.

platypus on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

Can McCain win without the libertarians and the paleocons voting for him?

MedSchoolCatholic on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

Since it’s Gallup, I’m mainly surprised that it doesn’t show The Chosen One ahead by 900 points in all 57 states with a record number of angels and cherubim showing up to vote early while trumpets fanfare from the skies.

I guess they’re not feeling all that optimistic anymore.

Thanks for the video, though. Now THAT was amazing!

Misha I on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

LOL, this is a funny joke.

MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

I don’t care what the polls say. I voted for McCain/ Palin today in Kansas through early voting. Screw the polls! This isn’t over untill all the votes are counted! So if you are worried aboout the outcome, go vote!

lobo603 on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

Fly, Johnny, fly!!!!!!!!!

(oh well, off to work and the cone of silence….)

Limerick on November 1, 2008 at 3:15 PM

Don’t forget what Hillbuzz said!

ctmom on November 1, 2008 at 3:16 PM

We’re going to win.

Yes, we are, but only if you go to vote and take a friend, neighbor etc who might have been discouraged by these fake polls. Whose purpose is to suppress and depress Republican voters.

Fortunata on November 1, 2008 at 3:18 PM

What Hillbuzz said? You make me curious.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:18 PM

I want to know why Gallup is even mentioned? What exactly has Gallup done recently to earn them any respect whatsoever?

Zogby’s actually poll got it right in 2000 and 2004. Zogby himself may have gone away from his poll and predicted Kerry would win, but his actually poll was correct.

MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:19 PM

http://hillbuzz.wordpress.com/

They say lots of things but nothing about voting for Obama:)

Dr Evil on November 1, 2008 at 3:20 PM

Leave it to AP to bring up the negative. You’d think in the last few days here that we could focus just a little on the positive. How about being a force to help conservatives? We can win this. Get out and vote people. Obama will certainly win if we just sit around and focus on the negative polls. We have a chance here. The polls should not be this tight. They should not! BO should be walking away with this and he is not. We aren’t just going to sit around and feel bad. VOTE and tell others to vote. Help the campaign if you can.

kerrhome on November 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM

As things stand, McCain has to take all six toss-up states plus Pennsylvania plus one other state to win.

I don’t understand why McCain has to win Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania hasn’t been red in a while. I do think that McCain has to win Virginia, Florida, Colorado and Ohio though.

terryannonline on November 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM

When more than 25% of those polled actually start answering questions and when the Obama campaign stops trying to manipulate the polls to discourage Republican turnout I might start caring about what a few thousand “likely” votes think.

Until then, the only poll I care about will be held next Tuesday. It is still close and either man could win. But believing nonsense like polls just make you crazy.

iconoclast on November 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM

This is the latest from Hillbuzz:

We truly appreciate all the support you’ve given us as we work through the last days of this election. We’re going to hit Ohio and Pennsylvania hard with teams of volunteers taking now through Election Night off, driving into the Buckeye and Keystone states to provide visibility, canvass, and hand out as much McCain/Palin material as possible to get out the vote and build excitement and enthusiasm. We appreciate any help you can give to support our efforts – it buys buttons, rents cars, puts volunteers up in hotels, and gets as many boots on the ground as we can muster to put everything we’ve got into specifically winning Ohio and Pennsylvania for McCain (since we believe these two states will secure the election for him, and they’re the two states we know best). $1, $5, whatever you can give helps us immensely.

November 1, 2008
“Why I’ll Be Voting McCain-Palin”
Posted by hillbuzz under Uncategorized

Dr Evil on November 1, 2008 at 3:21 PM

I’ll choose to believe we have a chance until we don’t.

phronesis on November 1, 2008 at 3:22 PM

Gallup: Obama now leads by 10 among both traditional and “expanded” likely voters…

I’ll call it…………………. Bullsh%T.

Seven Percent Solution on November 1, 2008 at 3:22 PM

How many people declined to respond to the poll? McCain supporters these days are much more likely to decline a response to a public poll than Obama supporters are. Particularly Hillary Democrats.

crosspatch on November 1, 2008 at 3:23 PM

I’m stocking up on popcorn.

platypus on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

We’re stocking up on ammunition.

tru2tx on November 1, 2008 at 3:24 PM

There will be riots…

ninjapirate on November 1, 2008 at 3:24 PM

Funny thing is, if you read Zogby on Wiki, he’s a hardcore Dem, and he’s worked for the DNC before…IIRC, anyway.

hippie_chucker on November 1, 2008 at 3:25 PM

McCain is going to win!

I am with whoever it was that said they will stay up long enough to see Olberman’s head explode, and will say the same of Matthews!

At this point I do not believe any of the polls, and that would include those in our favor. What I believe is that Americans smell pooh oozing from the Obama camp, and they do not like it. That bit over at the American Thinker just proves what I have been seeing in the internals for well over a month. Basically, for a multitude of different reasons, the American people do not trust Obama. This is not a vote for McCain so much as it is an outright rejection of Obama. Soros is going to have to find an newly groomed candidate for the next go round. Good luck George. We are watching your Marxist ass! We are watching you with Momma eyes that are in the back, side, front and top of our heads!

freeus on November 1, 2008 at 3:26 PM

given his present lead in every poll, many liberals fear that race will explain any defeat.)

What, Zogby isn’t a real poll?

jgapinoy on November 1, 2008 at 3:26 PM

My apartment is right next to Grant Park. McCain better pull this off or I’m going to go insane hearing the crowd hail their new Marxist overlord on Tuesday.

phronesis on November 1, 2008 at 3:27 PM

For many liberals, the chance to elect Mr. Obama, who would be the nation’s first black president, gives the United States a second chance to walk across the stage of world history.

These frickin’ toads. I’m more than satisfied with our first walk across the stage of world history. I say round these clowns up and deport them.

BuckeyeSam on November 1, 2008 at 3:27 PM

Eric Cantor said this morning at a rally in Chesterfield County that Virginia is about 1.5% points apart.

I think the polls are heavily weighted towards Dems via the new registrants. Well. They have no proven voting record, do they?

McCain staffers here in VA aren’t bummed. Quite the contrary. There were about 100 people out this afternoon to hear Cantor speak. More than 10,000 tickets have been reserved for Sarah Palin’s appearance tonight in Henrico County (right next door). Chesterfield is one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation, and it’s pretty deeply red.

And last, but not least, this former Democratic voter intends to vote McCain Palin. So do many of her former Democratic friends.

Don’t give up quite yet.

Meryl Yourish on November 1, 2008 at 3:27 PM

I am not afraid. You can only hear small whispers of it now, but average working Democrats are jumping off Obama’s bandwagon. Once people are in the privacy of the voting booth, they’re going to vote McCain. BHO knows this and he’s going to be losing sleep this weekend. The election is slipping through his fingers.

El_Terrible on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

The video reinforces one of my rules for voting:
When given the choice, always vote for the pilot over the non-pilot.

DarkCurrent on November 1, 2008 at 3:12 PM

+1 !!

pambi on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

Another day, another rigged poll. Nothing to see here folks, move along…

eyedoc on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

The polls are very wrong.

tanmany2k on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

For years there has been a drum beat calling McCain the devil now everyone wants him to win. Talk radio has been just as bad if not worst. If McCain doesn’t win there needs to be some people looking in the mirror and not at others. It will be tough to tear someone down then build them back up. Ingraham, Hannity and Rush didn’t pass Reagans test, don’t speak ill of another republican. you can disagree without destroying someone in your own party

KBird on November 1, 2008 at 3:29 PM

You sure love to spoon out the doom & gloom, Allahpundit. You going to join the Georgetown Surrender Monkeys before Tuesday?

The massive, unchecked voter fraud now being perpetrated by Osama Obama’s goons in many states is beginning to make me wonder if the polls are reflecting the beliefs of illegal multiple/dead/transient voters, I admit.

Never thought this great nation would be reduced to the status of a third-world banana republic election-wise, but that’s what Obama wanted. And got.

Instead of being in jail, he seems about to become president.

MrScribbler on November 1, 2008 at 3:30 PM

Ms. Kuhlman shakes her head and says, “If he doesn’t get this, I’ll be crying so hard.”

Yes you will, Mrs. Kuhlman. And I’ll be there to lick up your tears, those sweet, bitter, anguished tears. Oh, they will taste so good.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:31 PM

I am not afraid. You can only hear small whispers of it now, but average working Democrats are jumping off Obama’s bandwagon. Once people are in the privacy of the voting booth, they’re going to vote McCain. BHO knows this and he’s going to be losing sleep this weekend. The election is slipping through his fingers.

El_Terrible on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

I said something like this before. I don’t think McCain has to win Pennsylvania, but I think he will because while union members have to publicly “support” Obama, once they are in the privacy of the voting booth, I don’t see them voting for Obama, not with the card check law.

MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:32 PM

Instead of being in jail, he seems about to become president. – MrScribbler on November 1, 2008 at 3:30 PM

Lighten up, snapperhead. McCain is going to win this.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:32 PM

Independents and us. We can do it.

marklmail on November 1, 2008 at 3:33 PM

Kindergartener forced to sign gay pledge.

What the hell is wrong with people?

Blake on November 1, 2008 at 3:33 PM

Rasmussen has PA w/n margin of error…. if McCain pulls out PA then OH, VA, MO, NC, FL, will all follow, just watch. Then it’ll come down to IA, NM, NV, CO and McCain could just pull this thing off!

Noneya on November 1, 2008 at 3:34 PM

I’m not going to do any predicting of who will win Tuesday. I will just wait and see. Whatever happens, happens. I voted and did my part. Nothing else I can do.

terryannonline on November 1, 2008 at 3:36 PM

What the hell, I already FL early voted…and dragged the wife with me. Just in Case, AP, have Humpbot cued up, just in case….that, and Shaq’s “Tell me how my ass tastes”.

Kid from Brooklyn on November 1, 2008 at 3:39 PM

Dude, that video about gave me a heart attack.
Has that pilot got skills or what???????

jgapinoy on November 1, 2008 at 3:40 PM

Either this election will be the biggest thing to hit public political polling in 60 years, or it will confirm the underlying assumptions guiding almost all public polling. Ditto for the pundits, the mass media, and a lot else. Either the polls are “good enough for government work” this time around, or they aren’t. There’s good reason to suspect that they might not be, and this isn’t “poll trutherism” – it’s a suspicion entertained by many highly sophisticated and well-informed observers.

Without going into detailed arguments, both traditional (pseudo-random live interviews) and modified (party-weight corrected, robocalls, etc.) public polls are well-known to be at least in theory more subject to systematic error than true scientific polling. It may be that any such flaws – urban bias, respondent self-selection bias, interviewer bias, etc. – are accentuated in this presidential election in ways that pollsters were and remain simply unprepared to deal with.

Many people assume that if Gallup in 1948 hadn’t made his famous decision to cease polling more than week before the election, he might have picked up a late shift to Truman. It’s just as possible that Gallup had systematically mis-called the election all along, and that an election eve poll relying on the identical methods would have produced results as wrong or nearly as wrong as his earlier call – that there was no major late shift, but rather that there was an effectively un-polled (or disproportionately suppressed) segment of the electorate.

It may very well turn out that the profusion of polls, rather than creating a presumed opportunity for mutual error correction, has merely produced redundancy. Think of a rifle with a faultily zeroed scope. Firing it 100 times would increase the odds of occasionally hitting the target, but averaging the misses together wouldn’t produce anything close to a bullseye.

CK MacLeod on November 1, 2008 at 3:40 PM

For many liberals, the chance to elect Mr. Obama, who would be the nation’s first black president, gives the United States a second chance to walk across the stage of world history.”

I prefer Mark Steyn’s take:

“The two-dimensional idea of President Obama is seductive: To elect a young black man of Kenyan extraction and Indonesian upbringing offers redemption both for America’s original sin (slavery) and for the more recent perceived sins of President Bush — his supposed enthusiasm for sticking it to foreigners generally, and the Muslim world in particular. And no, I’m not saying he’s Muslim. It’s worse than that: He’s a pasty-faced European — at least in his view of state power, welfare, and taxation.”

AntonK on November 1, 2008 at 3:41 PM

Lighten up, snapperhead. McCain is going to win this.

I admire your optimism. I try to do the same but when I see 10 points diffrence in Gallup and about 5 in Rasmussen I keep on wondering and loose my confidence in a McCain win.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:41 PM

Pray, vote, drink, repeat. Pray, vote, drink, repeat. Pray…

hippie_chucker on November 1, 2008 at 3:42 PM

Appropriately named plane killa thrilla. amazing.
Allah, you’re not one of those Obamabots whom Hillary’s secret spokesperson said yesterday was trying to sow division, and despair and confusion into the republican base?

eaglewingz08 on November 1, 2008 at 3:43 PM

Actually Zogby has Obama by 5 doesn’t he? We just never or rarely ever get the 1-day numbers for Gallup. Once the race is over it’ll be another situation where Zogby will claim thosesingle day results aren’t something you should bother looking at as he never reports them and they were just “Leaked”. He does it for attention, nothing else.

Typhonsentra on November 1, 2008 at 3:44 PM

Two words: Silent Majority.

The fact is that the vast majority of Americans are so turned-off by Obama now that they will vote against him no matter what. Many of these people once supported Obama. These are hard-working people who keep their opinions to themselves and within their close circle of friends and family. They do not answer polls or add to message boards. They smile politely while others hash it out and when November comes around they will remember all of Obama’s associations and lies.

It’s from something I read – in March.

tru2tx on November 1, 2008 at 3:44 PM

Pray, vote, drink, repeat. Pray, vote, drink, repeat. Pray…

I pray and I drink. I cannot vote. I am not a citizen yet. That’s for I am so upset. But I do pray for McCain every single day and I burn candles for his victory.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:44 PM

My apartment is right next to Grant Park. McCain better pull this off or I’m going to go insane hearing the crowd hail their new Marxist overlord on Tuesday.

phronesis on November 1, 2008 at 3:27 PM

Board up your windows. Those people are going to be very ANGRY. I hope Obama cries at his concession speech.

El_Terrible on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

more of the disinformation machine. Were gonna need a major press overhaul when McCain walks off with this.

johnnyU on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

Strange. DRUDGE has pulled the Zogby story. It’s not even in little print.

Weight of Glory on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

if not, well, this isn’t America any more folks. It ended on 9/11

johnnyU on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

1. I hope that lots of Obama supporters will be crying after all the counting has been done.

2. If Obama wins, I hope that evidence of him directly involved in cheating, voter fraud, campaign fund cheating and whatever else that defines him as a crook and a cheat comes to light; and he is impeached.

3. 2012 Sarah Palin is the President.

mindhacker on November 1, 2008 at 3:46 PM

The polls are very wrong. – tanmany2k on November 1, 2008 at 3:28 PM

They are the only weapon Obama’s minions in the Drive-By media have left in their arsenal. And they will be deployed with ferocity over the next 3 days.

Expect to see Obama’s poll numbers rise. Expect to see the talkin heads speak of an inevitable Obama landslide. Expect exit polls to show that nobody voted for McCain an everybody woted for the The One.

Expect ABCNBCCBSPBSCNNMSNBC to call the election for Obama a few minutes after the polls open. Expect all of this – it’s their last stand.

Don’t pay attention to any of it. Be sure to vote. Be sure your family, friends and neighbors vote for McCain. Friends don’t let friends vote for Obama.

Get out there and do your part, as much as you can.

You have so much to look forward to: Mr. Downs will be investing in some rope. Mrs. Kuhlman’s pillow will be awash with tears. Shana Rosen’s boyfriend will never get laid. And Dr. Slurzberg will be handing out antidepressants in Pez dispensers.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:46 PM

You really start to wonder if the narrative is being created that if Mccain wins it was either by A) Cheating or B) Racist Ameikkka.
If Barry wins by even 3 I’ll tip my hat to the little Marxist but I do not believe that 55 million voters want what this guy is pushing.
I do believe the media has such a desire to see him win that they would push the template that our country is filled with racists if the Messiah doesn’t roll to victory.

jjshaka on November 1, 2008 at 3:47 PM

In fact, if Obama wins this, I will NOT fly my flag any longer. I will de-install my flag pole from my yard.

johnnyU on November 1, 2008 at 3:47 PM

Ignore the polls, ignore the propaganda, just get out and vote.

All of the polls, all of the talk, all of the smoke and mirrors means less than your vote. You have the power, it was given to you by those that fought and died for this privilege.

Shine the light of your vote on the darkness, and pray.

Hening on November 1, 2008 at 3:49 PM

I admire your optimism. I try to do the same but when I see 10 points diffrence in Gallup and about 5 in Rasmussen I keep on wondering and loose my confidence in a McCain win. – clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:41 PM

How many times do I have to tell you to ignore the polls? They have been wrong in just about every major election, and this time around they are being ginned up in favor of Obama. The truth is that he is sinking like the Titanic.

The only thing that will help him is if we sit here carping and sniveling. Stop sniveling. Have a couple of drinks. Imagine mass moonbat suicide. That should cheer you up.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:50 PM

I hope Obama cries at his concession speech.

El_Terrible on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

No tears, anger. I picture him spewing venom and filled with disdain for the racists who dared to deny him his preordained coronation. He will threaten (in his nuanced way, of course) to make us pay.

IrishEi on November 1, 2008 at 3:50 PM

CK MacLeod, I think you may be right about a lot of what you say. Rush just mentioned on Thursday that there were almost as many polls in October of this year as there were during the entire 2004 election.

Think about how many people are probably fed up with polls and don’t even want to listen to their crap, regardless of who it is that is calling. Obama supporters are probably a lot less likely to tire of the polling because it gives them a chance to be cool and a part of “history” and all of the polls are looking good for them anyway. That’s not so much the case with people voting for McCain, they are tired of this crap.

I truly think there is a very large silent majority.

MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:51 PM

<a href=”http://www.debbieschlussel.com/archives/2008/10/exclusive_dance.html“> Dance Troupe @ Obama-Khalidi Dinner (of Secreted Tape Fame) Simulated Beheadings in Recent Past

Marsh on November 1, 2008 at 3:51 PM

Obama’s campaign was promising more tactic. This could be it. They really want us to stay home and think this is over.
For all we know one of his people got in Zogby’s database.

The people he wants to give everything to are so lazy how will they even vote unless someone drives them to a poll place or a voting truck comes to their house? The data has just got to be wrong.

I mean what I said about my flag. It won’t fly under his rule, if he steals this thng.

johnnyU on November 1, 2008 at 3:53 PM

My apartment is right next to Grant Park. McCain better pull this off or I’m going to go insane hearing the crowd hail their new Marxist overlord on Tuesday. – phronesis on November 1, 2008 at 3:27 PM

I suggest you double-bolt the door and have a shotgun handy. When Obama gives his concession speech the savages are going to burn Barackopolis II to the ground and pillage the city.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:54 PM

Strange. DRUDGE has pulled the Zogby story. It’s not even in little print.

I saw that too and I wonder why.

How many times do I have to tell you to ignore the polls?

I try to do this every single day but it seems I can’t help myself not to look for some encouraging signs in the polls.But maybe you live in a toss up state and you have a better view about the outcome. Here in California there is not too much to see of to feel.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:54 PM

To: Interested Parties
From: Rick Davis, Campaign Manager
Date: October 31, 2008
RE: The Final Push

The State of the Campaign

If your television is tuned to cable news as frequently as ours are here at campaign headquarters, you have seen the pundits say John McCain and his campaign are done. And, if you’ve followed this race since the beginning, this is clearly a song you’ve heard before. I wanted to take some time today to give you some insight on the state of the race as we see it.

An AP poll released this morning revealed a very telling fact: ONE out of every SEVEN voters is undecided. That means, if 130 million voters turn out on Tuesday, 18.5 million of them have yet to make up their mind. With that many votes on the table and the tremendous movement we’ve seen in this race, I believe we are in a very competitive campaign.

Here’s why:

All the major polls have shown a tightening in the race and a significant narrowing of the numbers. In John McCain’s typical pattern, he is closing strong and surprising the pundits. We believe this race is winnable, and if the trajectory continues, we will surpass the 270 Electoral votes needed on Election Night.

National Polls: Major polls last week showed John McCain trailing by double-digit margins – but by the middle of this week, we were within the margin of error on four national tracking surveys. In fact, the Gallup national tracking survey showed the race in a virtual tie 2 days this week.

State Polls:

Iowa – Our numbers in Iowa have seen a tremendous surge in the past 10 days. We took Obama’s lead from the double digits to a very close race. That is why you see Barack Obama visiting the state in the final days, trying to stem his losses. It is too little, too late. Like many other Midwestern states, Iowa is moving swiftly into McCain’s column.

The Southwest – It is no secret that Republican candidates in the Southwest have to focus on winning over enough Latino and Hispanic voters in Nevada, New Mexico and Colorado to carry them to victory. John McCain has overcome challenges Republicans face, and has made up tremendous ground in these states with these voters. For these voters, the choice has become clear, and you have seen a big change in the numbers. John McCain is now winning enough voters to perform within the margin of error – putting these states within reach.

Colorado – Barack Obama tried to outspend our campaign in Colorado during the early weeks of October and finish off our candidate in Colorado. However, after our visit early this week, we saw a tremendous rebound in our poll position, and Colorado is back on the map.

Ohio and Pennsylvania – Everyone knows that vote rich Ohio and Pennsylvania will be key battlegrounds for this election. Between the two: 41 electoral votes and no candidate has gotten to the White House without Ohio. Senator McCain and Governor Palin have been campaigning non-stop in these key battleground states and tonight Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has pumped up our campaign at a rally in Columbus. Our position in these states is strong and undecided voters continue to have a very favorable impression of our candidate.
Obama campaign faces tremendous structural challenges in the final days of this campaign

Obama has a challenge hitting 50%: Barack Obama has not reached the 50% threshold in almost any the battleground state. He consistently is performing in the 45-48% range. When we look closely at the primary votes, we see a history of a candidate whose Election Day performance is often at or behind his final polling numbers. If this is true, our surge will leave Obama with even or under 50% of the vote on Election Day.

Early Vote: The Obama campaign has promised that their early vote and absentee efforts will change the composition of the electorate. They have sold the press on a story that first time voters will turn out in droves this election cycle. Again, the facts undermine their argument. In our analysis of early voting and absentee votes to date: The composition of the electorate has not changed significantly and most folks who have voted early are high propensity voters who would have voted regardless of the high interest in this campaign.

Expanding the Field: Obama is running out of states if you follow out a traditional model. Today, he expanded his buy into North Dakota, Georgia and Arizona in an attempt to widen the playing field and find his 270 Electoral Votes. This is a very tall order and trying to expand into new states in the final hours shows he doesn’t have the votes to win.
The Final Barnstorm

On Monday, we will have a 14 state rally with our candidates crisscrossing the country trying to turn out our voters and sway the final undecided voters. Governor Palin will hit Ohio, Missouri, Iowa, Colorado, Nevada and Alaska in the final day of campaigning, while Senator McCain will travel from Tampa, Florida, to Virginia, then Pennsylvania, Indiana, New Mexico, Nevada and finish the night in Prescott, Arizona. The enthusiasm and excitement we generate on Monday will be the electricity that powers our “Get Out the Vote” efforts on Tuesday.
On the Ground

Our field organization has tremendous energy and is out-performing the Bush campaign at the same time in 2004. This week our field organization crossed a huge threshold and began reaching more than one million voters per day, and by week’s end will have contacted more than 5 million voters. Our phone centers are full and our rate of voter contact is significantly out-pacing the Bush campaign in 2004. We have the resources to do the voter contact necessary to support the surge we are seeing in our polling with old fashioned grassroots outreach.
On the Airwaves
In the final days of the campaign, our television presence will be bigger and broader than the Obama campaign’s presence. The full Republican effort – the RNC’s Independent Expenditure and the McCain campaign will out-buy Barack Obama and the Democrats by just about 10 million dollars.
In short: the McCain campaign is surging in the final 72 hours. Our grassroots campaign is vibrant and communicating to voters in a very powerful way. Our television presence is strong. And, we have a secret ingredient – A candidate who will never quit and who will never stop fighting for you and for your families.

In these final hours, Senator McCain and Governor Palin are counting on you – they are counting on you to knock on doors, to make turnout calls, to contact your friends and neighbors. Get our voters to the polls and help John McCain fight for your and for our country. This is our last mission on behalf of John McCain and I have no doubt I can count on your effort and energy to carry us across the line to victory.

Marsh on November 1, 2008 at 3:54 PM

I truly think there is a very large silent majority. – MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:51 PM

And we are part of it, but we cannot afford to be silent. Contact everyone you know and make sure they vote for McCain.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:55 PM

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:44 PM

But you could vote for Osama Obama right now!

Ain’t “democracy” wonderful?

/s

If we are beaten, it will be by thugs and gross violations of the law.

I’m still going with ManlyRash on this one. I can’t believe my nation, which has endured for 232 years, will be handed over to a Marxist goon who has neither the ability or desire to protect it.

MrScribbler on November 1, 2008 at 3:57 PM

Not sure for whose campaign this is supposed to be a metaphor.

I guess it’s supposed to symbolize McCain. Despite the fact that he does lose his right wing, he does land the plane. And he was once a pilot, although he did get shot down.

Okay, it’s McCain. Pulls out of almost certain doom.

MCCAIN-PALIN (and LeMay) ‘08 VICTORY

J.J. Sefton on November 1, 2008 at 3:57 PM

@Marsh I got the same email. Still I keep wondering why Drudge pulled out the Zgoby story. Som,ething is fishy here.

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 3:57 PM

Wouldn’t it be awesome though if McCain wins the presidency, Coleman defeats Al Franken, and John Murtha loses his seat on Tuesday? That would be great.

terryannonline on November 1, 2008 at 3:58 PM

I do believe the media has such a desire to see him win that they would push the template that our country is filled with racists if the Messiah doesn’t roll to victory. jjshaka on November 1, 2008 at 3:47 PM

Good. Fine. Let ‘em. I am so sick and tired of being called a racist, that I will wear that label and wear it with a swagger.

And another thing: I saw Joe Scarborough this morning getting all over the media with righteous indignation about how biased the media has been for the past 18 months for Obama. It looks like he’s already trying to rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic before Tuesday. What a joke.

tru2tx on November 1, 2008 at 3:59 PM

No tears, anger. I picture him spewing venom and filled with disdain for the racists who dared to deny him his preordained coronation. He will threaten (in his nuanced way, of course) to make us pay. – IrishEi on November 1, 2008 at 3:50 PM

Only privately. Publicly he will be pleading with his followers not to burn Chicago to the ground. It’ll be fun to watch – unless you live in Chicago.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:59 PM

From Rush’s show yesterday, quoting HillBuzz…

Let me share with you another post from another anonymous person, this also from the Obama campaign. It’s a woman, and what we’re picking up out there is that there really are a number of angry Democrat women. They are angry over the way this Democrat party is treating traditional Democrat voters, trying to destroy Joe the Plumber, an average blue-collar guy; trying to destroy Sarah Palin. These women do not like it. Let me read you part four of this latest anonymous post for an Obama campaign worker. This is a different one than Sarah P. from yesterday. This is a long post. I’m just going to read you this one point, number four.

“The Bradley Effect. Do not believe these public polls for a second. I just went over our numbers, found that we have next to no chance –” this is regarding Obama, “– in the following states: Missouri, Indiana, North Carolina, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada. Ohio leans heavily to McCain but it’s too close to call it for him. Virginia, Pennsylvania, Colorado, New Mexico, and Iowa are the true toss-up states. The only two of these the Obama campaign feels confident are Iowa and New Mexico, but now Obama’s headed back to Iowa on Monday. The reason for such polling discrepancy is the Bradley Effect, and this is a subject of much discussion in the campaign. In general, we in the Obama campaign tend to take a ten-point percentage in allowing for this, a minus ten-point percentage for allowing this and are not comfortable until the polls give us a spread well over this mark.” Let me pause here. I granted an interview back in August with a guy from the UK Telegraph. That interview was published. It’s a long story. It’s not bad. The guy gets a lot of things wrong, but he’s a better writer than a lot of our guys. The things he gets wrong he pulled out of the Nexis database, he’s got Chuck Norris living next to me and this sort of stuff, but the quotes are good.

One of the things I said to him, “The Bradley Effect.” I said, “If Obama’s not up ten points or more going into this, then they’re in trouble,” and here’s this woman from the Obama campaign now posting saying the same thing. “In general, we tend to take a minus ten point percentage in allowing for the Bradley Effect. We’re not comfortable until the polls give us a spread well over this mark. That is why we are still campaigning in Virginia and Pennsylvania. This is why Ohio is such a desperate hope for us. What truly bothers the Obama campaign is the fact that some pollsters get up to an 80% refuse-to-respond result. You can’t possibly include these in the polls, but they are. The truth is, people are afraid to let people know who they’re voting for. The vast majority of these responders are McCain supporters. Obama is the hip choice and we all know it,” and they’re worried that hip does not translate on Election Day.

She continued here, “As part of my research duties I scour right-wing blogs and websites to get somewhat of a feel as to what’s being talked about on the other side. Much of it’s nonsense, but there are some exceptions which give the campaign jitters. A spirited campaign has been made to infiltrate many pro-Hillary sites and discredit them. A more disorganized but genuine effort has also been made to sow doubts among the unapologetically right-wing sites such as RedState.com. Don’t you guys get it? This has been the Obama campaign’s sole strategy from the beginning. The only way he wins is over a dispirited, disorganized, and demobilized opposition. This is how it’s been for all of his campaigns. What surprises me is that everybody’s fallen for it. You may point to the polls as proof to the inevitability of all this. If so, you have fallen for the oldest trick in the book. How do we skew the polls you might ask? It all starts with the media buzz, which has been generated over the campaign. The media is now factoring the public mood in their weighting of poll results. Many stories are generated on the powerful Obama ground game and how many new voters were registered. None of this happens by coincidence, all part of the poll skewing process. This makes pollsters change their mixes to reflect these new voters and tilt the mix more towards Democrat voters.

“What is not mentioned or reported is not the underreported cell phone users or young voters we hear so much about. What’s underreported is you, the American people. That’s underreported. I changed my somewhat positive opinion of this campaign during the unfair and sexist campaign against Sarah Palin. I’ll never agree with her on anything. I’ll probably never vote for her, but I’m embarrassed at what’s happened. I can’t ignore our own hand in all this. What I do know is I’m not voting Obama this time around. Treat that as you will.” Yet another anonymous poster from the Obama campaign to go with Sarah P. from yesterday that was on HillBuzz. And, by the way, Sarah P. is back. She’s got another one today, and there are additional posts like this. Now, you might be saying, “Rush, are you sure this is not a setup?” Well, tell me something. I share this stuff with you. I tell you it comes from the Obama campaign, disaffected female members of the Obama campaign. Does it depress you? Does it inspire you not to vote, or does it do the opposite? What could be in it for Obama to have people going on websites putting this stuff out? I can’t think of anything. If you can, let me know.

Badger in KC on November 1, 2008 at 3:59 PM

Wouldn’t it be awesome though if McCain wins the presidency, Coleman defeats Al Franken, and John Murtha loses his seat on Tuesday? That would be great.

terryannonline on November 1, 2008 at 3:58 PM

That would be lovely.

Spirit of 1776 on November 1, 2008 at 4:00 PM

But you could vote for Osama Obama right now!

For sure I could try but I have too much respect for what means the right to vote to do it. People died in my native Romania for the right to vote in free elections. It’s a precious right. And Obama is not my cup of tea.

Wouldn’t it be awesome though if McCain wins the presidency, Coleman defeats Al Franken, and John Murtha loses his seat on Tuesday? That would be great.

It would be Christmas in november meets Valentine’s Day and Easter. :))

clemycali on November 1, 2008 at 4:01 PM

Wouldn’t it will be awesome though if when McCain wins the presidency, Coleman defeats Al Franken, and John Murtha loses his seat on Tuesday? That would will be great.

Fixed it for you, sweety.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 4:01 PM

People, does this poll pass the smell test? how can you have the same percentage split with different demographics? Something isn’t right here…

ColHogan on November 1, 2008 at 4:02 PM

Can McCain win without the libertarians and the paleocons voting for him?

MedSchoolCatholic on November 1, 2008 at 3:14 PM

The Libertarians not voting McCain got convinced by one too many spliffs with their liberal buddies that all it takes for the Libertarians to become a major party is the death of the GOP. However, I think they are a minority of libertarian-minded people. Most libertarian-minded folks are voting McCain as the lesser of two evils.

So-called “paleocons” are also rare than hens’ teeth, and are often more worried about fluoridation thna taxation.

Sekhmet on November 1, 2008 at 4:02 PM

I truly think there is a very large silent majority. – MobileVideoEngineer on November 1, 2008 at 3:51 PM

And we are part of it, but we cannot afford to be silent. Contact everyone you know and make sure they vote for McCain.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 3:55 PM

If we stay the silent majority, we face the prospect of becoming the SILENCED majority.

Do not let this happen. VOTE REPUBLICAN DOWN THE LINE!!!!!!!!!!!!

J.J. Sefton on November 1, 2008 at 4:03 PM

McCain wins on a wing and a prayer…….and the Bradley effect.

Mallard T. Drake on November 1, 2008 at 4:03 PM

People, does this poll pass the smell test? how can you have the same percentage split with different demographics? Something isn’t right here… – ColHogan on November 1, 2008 at 4:02 PM

BINGO. As I said, Col Hogan, this is the last gasp of the Drive-By media. They are farked and they know it.

ManlyRash on November 1, 2008 at 4:03 PM

Polls are not to be believed except by the sheeple and those who want to be on the ‘winning’ side. I know that here in Canada, for our election a couple of weeks ago, the polls were wrong. They had predicted (an average of the 5 main polls) the Cons would only win 131 seats (they won 143), and the Fibs would win 89 (they won only 76). All I can say is…VOTE!!!!! It is the PEOPLE that make the difference; not the polls

pcbedamned on November 1, 2008 at 4:04 PM

Strange. DRUDGE has pulled the Zogby story. It’s not even in little print.

Weight of Glory on November 1, 2008 at 3:45 PM

True, but he also pulled all the other polls with it – of which there were 3-4 additional ones, all shown O ftw.

Spirit of 1776 on November 1, 2008 at 4:04 PM

Comment pages: 1 2 3 ... 7


You must be logged in to post a comment.