Obama Rising?

by: Chris Bowers

Wed Jan 30, 2008 at 08:07


Gallup shows evidence of significant national momentum for Obama:

Barack Obama has now cut the gap with Hillary Clinton to 6 percentage points among Democrats nationally in the Gallup Poll Daily tracking three-day average, and interviewing conducted Tuesday night shows the gap between the two candidates is within a few points. Obama's position has been strengthening on a day-by-day basis. As recently as Jan. 18-20, Clinton led Obama by 20 points. Today's Gallup Poll Daily tracking is based on interviews conducted Jan. 27-29, all after Obama's overwhelming victory in South Carolina on Saturday. Two out of the three nights interviewing were conducted after the high-visibility endorsement of Obama by Sen. Edward Kennedy and his niece Caroline Kennedy.

Clinton's lead in the three-day average is now 42% to Obama's 36%. John Edwards, who dropped out of the race Wednesday after Gallup conducted these interviews, ended his quest for the presidency with 12% support. Wednesday night's interviewing will reflect the distribution of the vote choice of former Edwards' supporters as well as the impact, if any, of Hillary Clinton's popular vote win in Florida on Tuesday.

Rasmussen does not yet show similar Obama momentum nationally, but the only state it polled after South Carolina does hold some good news for Obama:

The first Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Connecticut's Democratic Presidential Primary shows the race couldn't possibly get any closer. New York Senator Hillary Clinton attracts 40% of the vote and so does Illinois Senator Barack Obama. John Edwards is a very distant third at 11% while 3% say they'd vote for some other candidate and 6% are not sure.

There have also been two California polls since South Carolina. One shows Obama pulling ahead of Clinton:

On the Democratic side, the combined results of three nightly samplings of 400 different voters - for Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday - found Hillary Rodham Clinton at 36 percent, Obama at 31 percent and John Edwards at 12 percent.

But when taken alone, Sunday's tracking - just a day after Obama's big win in the South Carolina primary - had Obama leading Clinton, 35 percent to 32 percent, with Edwards' share growing to 16 percent. And pretty much the same numbers came up Monday.

Survey USA, the other organization to poll California after South Carolina, shows Clinton ahead by 8% among likely voters, but with a gaping 24% advantage among those who has already voted.

Overall, there does seem to be movement toward Obama, which is good news for his campaign when it comes to securing Edwards supporters. However, the evidence is both a little spotty and a little thin. Further, Clinton can still rely on a large advantage among early voters, and bounces almost always fade. Tomorrow's polling, which will be the first after Florida, and after Edwards has dropped out, will provide significant insight.

Chris Bowers :: Obama Rising?

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Obama Rising? | 7 comments
Not enough (0.00 / 0)
Obama didn't just need to cut into Hillary's lead; he needed to eliminate it.

Nothing much is likely to happen between now and Tuesday to affect the dynamics of the race. (Debates haven't seemed to make much of an impact in this race (though of course if something dramatic happens it will, but what are the chances of that) and probably the best Obama can hope for with regard to Edwards voters is to split them with Hillary.)

Which means in all likelihood, Obama loses most of the Super Tuesday primaries. And where does he go from there?


Bump (0.00 / 0)
I predict that you will see a tightening of the poll's by Rasmussen and Gallup tomorrow,

The full impact of the Kennedy endorsement has not been seen yet.

The withdrawl from the campaign by Edwards and Guliani has stepped all over Clinton's Florida results in which the headlines in NY TIMES WAS ALL mCcAIN AND IN wASHINGTON pOST WAS mCcain AND LITTLE ABOUT CLINTON.


[ Parent ]
23% (0.00 / 0)
If I read that correctly, 23% of likely CA voters have already voted and overwhelmingly for Clinton.  Even if CA favors Obama on election day it is hard to see how he makes up this lost ground.

On the other hand, this is not winner take all.  Delegates are important but momentum is still more important (though just barely at this point.)  If I was on Obama's team I'd start spinning now about absentee voting and how we should all focus on what the voters are saying today, now that they have had a better chance to meet the candidates.


1/3 of Tracking Poll (0.00 / 0)
Chris:

I respect you and your analysis of polls -- it is one of the main reasons why I read this site regularly.  That being said, IMO, looking at one night from a tracking poll out of context from the rest of the nights contained in the poll, which apparently shows a 3 point lead, does not equal a poll showing Obama moving ahead.  The point of 3 day averages in tracking polls is to show movement over time.  You cannot take one night and claim significant information from that because the sample is too small.  Only once you combine the three nights do you have samples that are statistically accurate.  The deviation is simply too great to distill any meaning out of this.  While I have no problem with you hyping it on the front page, I do believe that it is disingenuous to say that it rises to the level of a statistically significant poll result.


living the dream (0.00 / 0)
His dream lasts only a few more days, no need to deprive him of all hope. Maybe afterwards he can step back and question his theories about how elections work. I'd hate to see him continue writing this stuff through the general, we'll need a cold, analytical eye to beat the Republicans.

[ Parent ]
Obama Rising? | 7 comments
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