The Latest Polls Go McCain/Palin’s Way
By SusanUnPC on September 8, 2008 at 9:56 PM in Barack Obama, Current Affairs, McCain/Palin 2008
Rasmussen Reports, with Fox News, has key new polls in the battleground states:
| — | OH | VA | FL | CO | PA |
| 51% | 49% | 48% | 46% | 45% | |
| Obama | 44 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 47 |
Washington Post/ABC News, national:
Sen. John McCain has wiped away many of Sen. Barack Obama’s pre-convention advantages, and the race for the White House is now basically deadlocked at 47 percent for Obama and 46 percent for McCain among registered voters, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. The presidential contest is also about even among those who are the most likely to vote in November: 49 percent for McCain, 47 percent for Obama. …
The Gallup and CNN polls are below the fold:
Gallup, the daily tracking poll:
Gallup Daily: McCain’s Bounce Gives Him 5-Point Lead — Leads Obama 49%-44% in first results conducted fully after GOP convention — PRINCETON, NJ — John McCain leads Barack Obama, 49% to 44%, in the immediate aftermath of the Republican National Convention, according to the latest Gallup Poll Daily tracking results.
CNN, via the Political Ticker:
WASHINGTON (CNN) — A new national poll taken entirely after the end of the Republican convention suggests the race for the White House between John McCain and Barack Obama is dead even.
A CNN/Opinion Research Corporation Poll out Monday afternoon has McCain and Obama tied at 48 percent each among registered voters questioned. Three percent of voters are undecided in the survey, which was conducted Friday through Sunday. …
You’ll also want to check out the new A.P. story, “McCain leads Obama in 2 polls, race even in 3 more“. Here’s a snippet on that USA Today poll:
OF INTEREST: This poll shows McCain getting a substantial bounce after the Republican National Convention, overcoming a 7-percentage-point Obama lead before the convention began in St. Paul, Minn., last week. The addition of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to the Republican ticket led 29 percent of voters to say they were more likely to vote for McCain, while 21 percent said they were less likely. …






















