New Polls (June 29-July 1) | |||
State | Poll | Margin | |
---|---|---|---|
Alabama | Rasmussen | +15 | |
Arizona | Rasmussen | +9 | |
Florida | PPP | +2 | |
Florida | Strategic Vision | +6 | |
Florida | Rasmussen | +7 | |
Georgia | Rasmussen | +10 | |
Georgia | Strategic Vision | +8 | |
Louisiana | SMOR | +16 | |
Massachusetts | Rasmussen | +20 | |
Massachusetts | Survey USA | +13 | |
New York | Survey USA | +20 | |
North Carolina | PPP | +4 | |
Virginia | Survey USA | +2 |
Other than Georgia, Massachusetts was the only other state to have switched categories since the weekend. The Bay state moved from being an Obama lean to being a more comfortably strong state for the Illinois senator. Obviously, this pulls Massachusetts in line with where it would be expected to be given its past voting history. Some early tighter polls have kept Massachusetts under the 10% mark, but with the inclusion of more information, those polls are now acting as outliers in the formula.
Changes (June 29-July 1) | |||
State | Before | After | |
---|---|---|---|
Georgia | McCain lean | Strong McCain | |
Massachusetts | Obama lean | Strong Obama |
And what about the map? Well, both Georgia and Massachusetts get darker, but the underlying electoral college breakdown remains the same. Obama leads McCain by 298 electoral votes to 240. The Obama part of the map continues to solidify. Very few states are still "leans" for him. Most states that are in shades of blue are either solidly Obama or toss ups favoring the Illinois senator. The movement out of the lean category for Obama has been in the direction of more strongly supporting Obama as opposed to becoming any more weakly associated with him. For McCain, the story is a bit different. His "toss up" numbers have been fairly static for a couple of weeks now while there has been some shift between his "strong" and "lean" statistics. Overall, as we saw yesterday, McCain lost ground to Obama in 31 states during June while gaining in only 6 (though it should be noted that those six states are considered by many to be swing states).
As the week continues, there are several states to look for new polling from. Those states have not changed much since Sunday, but we can add Florida to the list. The trio of new polls from the Sunshine state pulled the average for Florida toward toss up status. It still leans to McCain, but only barely at this point. I don't want to set a precedent here, but Virginia, by virtue of several small polling victories for Obama is close to being added to the Watch List as well.
The Watch List* | |||
State | Switch | ||
---|---|---|---|
Alaska | from McCain lean | to Toss Up McCain | |
Florida | from McCain lean | to Toss Up McCain | |
Georgia | from Strong McCain | to McCain lean | |
Massachusetts | from Strong Obama | to Obama lean | |
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. |
Recent Posts:
Did Obama Bounce Everywhere in June?
The Electoral College Map (6/29/08)
The National Popular Vote Plan...and Other Ways of Reforming the Electoral College
Hey Josh, it looks like you might also have the electoral college number for the state of Kansas wrong. You've got it set at 8, but to the best of my knowledge it only receives 6.
ReplyDeleteAnton,
ReplyDeleteI wondered where that Idaho electoral vote went. It went to Kansas and multiplied.
Thanks for catching this. The wheels are falling off here. Ha! I'll get this fixed tonight. I misread the total when I redid the fonts from when Paul Gurian got the template to me.