Re: 15 States to Watch in the US Presidential Elec
New Polling in Nevada, Still Tied in Virginia
It’s been barely a week since my last look at my 15 states to watch, but we have some much needed new polling in Nevada, so I thought I would post a brief follow-up. My goal is to not update this weekly; more like monthly, unless we can replace some old numbers in some old polls. Since we haven’t had any good polling in Nevada for about 2 months, I thought this would qualify – plus we have some new numbers in Virginia.
Nevada – 5 EV
Mason-Dixon , 6/9-11, Obama 42%,
McCain 44%
The new numbers just reinforce what we already suspected, that Nevada is up for grabs. Obama has a huge lead with voters 18 to 34 years of age. Obama and McCain are tied with voters 35 to 49 years of age. McCain holds a huge lead with voters over the age of 50.
Obama wins the Hispanic vote 2 to 1. Obama was stronger with women, McCain was stronger with men. Clark County, home of Las Vegas, is home to 70% of the state’s population, and is the democratic base of the state. Obama holds a 7 point lead there. McCain has close to a 3 to 1 lead in the rural counties.
McCain has an 11 point lead, statewide, among independents, but 25% of independents still have not made their choice between the 2 candidates.
So clearly this is a toss-up state. Obama’s main job should be to shore up support in Las Vegas. McCain comes in to this contest with a huge lead in the rural counties, so the real battle appears to be the independents in Las Vegas. If Obama can close the gap in one or two places outside Las Vegas, such as Reno or Carson City, then the Las Vegas Independents won’t be as crucial. If McCain see’s the Las Vegas independents breaking more for him, then he will win Nevada. The fact that Nevada is finally in play, indicates a changing demographic in the west.
Advantage: Toss-Up
Virginia – 13 EV
Rasmussen, 6/16,
Obama 45%, McCain 44%
The new numbers confirm what we already knew. Virginia is up for grabs for the first time in 40 years. McCain’s lead with men seems to be slipping. Both candidates are tied with independents. Obama seems to be getting a slight, but insignificant, bump from clinching the nomination. 80% of liberals favor Obama, while 70% of conservatives favor McCain. Obama wins moderates with 56% to McCain’s 30%.
While previous polls have indicated Obama with a larger lead, Rasmussen has consistently indicated the race is much closer. I’m going to reclassify this state as a toss-up, rather than an Obama advantage. Still, anything other than a safe bet for McCain remains an Obama advantage. Given the fact that a year ago no one expected Virginia to be in play, even classifying this as a toss-up is still a loss for McCain.
Advantage: Toss-up