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People are not falling for Mccain's " straight talk." What are the republicans gonna do?

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Obama hits 50% mark in Gallup poll David Paul Kuhn

Tue Sep 2, 6:46 PM ET

Barack Obama met the 50 percent threshold for the first time Tuesday in the Gallup daily tracking poll, a symbolic hurdle that until now had eluded the Democratic nominee.

The Gallup daily tracking poll has found that since the conclusion of the Democratic convention, Obama has risen 5 percentage points in the polls and now leads John McCain 50 percent to 42 percent. That represents a positive turn for Obama, after a couple of days in which he appeared to have peaked at the 49 percent mark while McCain was showing slight improvements.

The survey indicates that Obama’s overall post-Democratic National Convention bounce now appears to be roughly at par with the norm of past conventions. Though smaller than several of the sizable bounces of recent decades, the new polling suggests that perhaps the Democratic convention bounce has yet to subside.

While an improvement from 49 percent to 50 percent is statistically insignificant, the 50 percent mark holds significance for a party seeking to win its first majority since 1976, when Jimmy Carter won with 50.1 percent.

Polling will likely remain in flux until early next week, after the conclusion of the Republican National Convention. On Saturday, Gallup reported Obama was ahead by 8 percentage points. By Monday, that lead had shrunk to 5 points. Today it returned to 8.

Obama and McCain were evenly split at 45 percent prior to the Democratic convention, according to Gallup. Should Obama maintain a 5-point bounce in the polls, that would meet the 5- to 6-point norm earned by a typical party nominee, by Gallup’s measure, since 1964.

That also means, however, that Obama’s historic acceptance speech before more than 80,000 people at Invesco Field in Denver Thursday night, a political event seen by about 40 million television viewers, has not vaulted him above the norm of past nominees.

But Obama now has his firmest political footing of the campaign, according to the polls. Daily tracking polls by Gallup and Rasmussen Reports demonstrate that Obama has taken his greatest lead since the beginning of the general election in June when Obama clinched the Democratic nomination.

Rasmussen also recorded an uptick in Obama’s standing on Tuesday, and he now leads McCain 51 percent to 45 percent.

CBS News reported Monday that Obama is ahead in its poll, 48 percent to 40 percent, a 3-point increase in Obama’s standing compared with its poll prior to the Democratic convention

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9 ANSWERS


  1. Probably fabricate a threat to America,then call those of us who still CARE about America - and the truth, Unpatriotic.


  2. If the beauty queen hockey mom and grandpa win, Im moving to Canada!!!!!!

  3. You might want to worry about Republicans not falling for Obama's rambling of hope and change with so few ways to support it.

    You may also want to take note that this poll was taken before Sarah Palin's speech.

  4. Perhaps they're only at their best when they all join together to have a 'we love the negative vibe' rally such as I witnessed last night....at least they can all join hands, throw up their arms and be happy in their hateful glee....

    As you can see, I was really put off by last nights convention....I felt like I was hit by a two by four after watching it....and saw how obvious was the absolute joy all those people took in the negative realm....

    If that's "straight talk"....I'll pass....

  5. Throw in the towel, hopefully.

  6. I'm sorry ,but the babbling Obama is going to have to scratch and pull every thing he's got after the blows dealt by "Sarah Palin" ,McCains running-mate. Polls are often bias and tend to show the views of the people asking the questions (not to mention yours are old). Sarah Palin's speech almost got as many viewers as Obamas speech and he was on 4 more networks than she. The fact is Palin's experience exceeds Obamas by far. Just like she brought up in her speech

    "Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown.

    And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves.

    I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a "community organizer," except that you have actual responsibilities. I might add that in small towns, we don't quite know what to make of a candidate who lavishes praise on working people when they are listening, and then talks about how bitterly they cling to their religion and guns when those people aren't listening.We tend to prefer candidates who don't talk about us one way in Scranton and another way in San Francisco."

    McCains Choice for VP has united the most conservatives since Ronald Reagan.


  7. Good, a longer drop.

    Can't wait to see his face in November when he loses, and says WTF?

  8. the hint in there would be that it is CBS news

    but that was BEFORE sarah palin's speech so who knows

  9. Lose.

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