Senate Race, Presidential Race Both
Toss-Ups In Georgia
(10/24/08) A new InsiderAdvantage / Poll Position survey shows
Georgia is a toss-up state in both the U.S. Senate and presidential
campaigns.
In the presidential race, Barack Obama has a slight edge over John
McCain, although it is within the margin of error. In the U.S. Senate
race, Saxby Chambliss has a 2-point edge over Jim Martin, although
it, too, is within the margin of error.
The two polls were conducted last night, each with 615 registered,
likely voters. The margin of error for both is plus or minus 3.8
percentage points.
The results:
Presidential
Obama, 48 percent
McCain, 47 percent
Other, 2 percent
Undecided, 3 percent
U.S. Senate
Chambliss, 44 percent
Martin, 42 percent
Buckley, 2 percent
Undecided, 12 percent
Matt Towery on the presidential race:
“Obama is doing better among white voters than Kerry did
in 2004 (according to exit polls of that race), carrying some 28
percent of the white vote. He’s carrying around 75 percent
both of the Hispanic and ‘other’ vote, which makes up
between four and five percent of Georgia’s electorate. He
is winning among independents, outside of the margin of error of
the poll.
“While this is a tight race, the problem for McCain is that
all but 3 percent of whites have made their decision and approximately
8 percent of black voters have continued to say they are undecided
or voting ‘other.’ This will likely move closer to 95
percent for Obama when all said and done. Obama has room to go up.
“If the race were to remain the way it is today, you won’t
see these numbers come to fruition until very late in the night
of Nov. 4 or perhaps the next day. The early numbers will likely
show McCain ahead, as the counties where Obama is doing best are
some of the largest counties and will be the slowest to report.”
Towery on the U.S. Senate race: “The senate
race appears in my judgment either headed for a runoff or a Martin
win, and here’s why I say that: over 15 percent of blacks
say they still are undecided. The largest undecided segment among
party affiliations are Democrats, who mirror that black percentage
– 14.5 percent – and independents at 18 percent, who
are leaning toward Martin by a margin of 45-33 percent. Generally
speaking, at this point in a race, unless something were to turn
it around, we would treat the undecideds two ways: we would either
lop it off and redistribute it, or we would assign it based on the
relative positions of the candidates as they stand today. Under
either of those scenarios, Chambliss and Martin would be in a runoff.”
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