Twenty-Seven New House Polls Indicate Democratic Takeover

Major poll dump--most important poll release on the House this cycle both thus far and by far. These polls are all conducted by Constituent Dynamics, August 27-29. They are done IVR style (automated telephone), are all likely voters, have large sample sizes (close to 1,000), and margin of error of 3.1%. Complete results can be found here. The letter after the number indicates which party is winning. Democratic pickups are in bold.

Republican held seats:
  • AZ-08: 50-46, D; Generic ballot
  • CO-04: 47-41, R; Musgrave leads Paccione.
  • CO-07: 48-46, D; Perlmutter leads O'Donnell
  • CT-02: 51-45, D; Courtney leads Simmons
  • CT-04: 49-42, R; Shays leads Farrell
  • FL-13: 56-39, R; Generic ballot
  • FL-22: 52-44, R; Shaw leads Kelin
  • IL-06: 47-46, D; Duckworth leads Roskam
  • IA-01: 54-41, D; Braley leads Whalen
  • KY-04: 49-46, R; Davis leads Lucas
  • MN-06: 53-42, R; Generic ballot
  • NV-03: 51-43, R; Porter leads Hafen
  • NM-01: 48-45, R; Wilson leads Madrid
  • NY-24: 49-41, D; Generic ballot
  • NC-11: 50-47, D; Shuler leads Taylor
  • OH-18: 47-43, D; Space leads Generic Republican
  • PA-06: 50-45, D; L. Murphy leads Gerlach
  • PA-08: 53-45, R; Fitzpatrick leads P. Murphy
  • PA-10: 50-43, D; Carney leads Sherwood
  • VA-02: 51-43, D; Kellam leads Drake
  • WA-08: 49-46, D; Burner leads Reichert
  • WI-08: 48-44, D; Generic ballot
Democratic held seats:
  • IA-03: 54-43, D; Boswell leads Lamberti
  • OH-06: 56-40, D; Wilson leads Bladsel
  • IL-08: 48-45, D; Bean leads McSweeney
  • VT-AL: 54-40, D; Welch leads Generic Republican
  • WV-01: 52-42, D; Mollohan leads Wakim
There will be three polls from Indiana in days to come. From what I understand, these districts will be polled at least one more time this cycle--maybe twice. Here are my thoughts:
  • These polls are great news for Dems. These polls show thirteen Democrats leading out of twenty-two Republican districts polled. Another three Democrats are within the margin of error. All Democratic targets, except in FL-13 and MN-06, are either ahead or within single digits.
  • Note the great Democratic pickup opportunties not included in this poll yet: CT-05, IN-02, IN-08, IN-09, OH-01, OH-15, PA-07 and TX-22. That is thirteen pickups already, in early September, without eight of our top twenty-eight targets polled (including two of our best chances--IN-09 and TX-22). That indicates a very strong opportunity for a Democratic pickup if the elections were held today.
  • Virtually no Democratic seats are threatened. Only Melissa Bean in IL-08 seems to be in a dogfight, and she has the largest cash advantage of all the other Dems in Dem held seats listed (who all have large cash advantages themselves).
  • Outside of the Senate race, Florida looks very, very bad for Dems this cycle. These poor numbers from Florida confirm the low Democratic turnout in the primary yesterday. Fortunately, that turnout now look anomalous to Florida. Bad news for Florida, good news for everyone else.
  • I wouldn't put too much faith in the "voter motivation index." Those numebrs indicate that everyone will vote. That isn't going to happen, especially among independents. Then again, these are likely voter polls though, so maybe I'm wrong / misreading the numbers.
Wow--amazing and important stuff. Later on, I will be updating the House forecast accordingly.

Update: House forecast updated. Make sure you refresh the page if it seems the same. I now forecast a Democratic takeover.



Display:


The Minnesota results are surprising. (none / 0)

MN-01

Republican Gil Gutknecht got 60% of the vote in 2004, and so I'm surprised to see it so close as he runs for re-election (MN-01: 48-45, R.)

People can donate to Democrat Tim Walz here for this race.

MN-06

Democrat Patty Wetterling got 46% of the vote in 2004, and so I'm surprised to see her so far behind against a more extreme opponent, Michelle Bachman (MN-06: 53-42, R.)


by EricJaffa on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:03:21 PM EST

Re: The Minnesota results are surprising. (none / 0)

MN-01 should be NM-01. There is a typo in Chris' post.


by mo on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:31:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The Minnesota results are surprising. (none / 0)

MN-01 was NM-01. I fixed the mistake.

I am also surprised by MN-06, but there ae still many reasons to have faith in that seat.
by Chris Bowers on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:46:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Regarding MN-06, hopefully it was the (none / 0)

...decision of the pollsters to use a generic ballot (when the nominees are almost definitely Patty Wetterling and Michelle Bachman) which made the Democrat do badly in the poll.


by EricJaffa on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:15:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: The Minnesota results are surprising. (none / 0)

Chris:

the generic ballot seems to mirror the partisan index in MN-06. It is a 56/44D district. Patty Wetterling will run well ahead of the curve based on her popularity and her opponent's insanity.

Wetterling is a state icon, voted one of the 100 most influential Minnesotans of the 20th century by the Mpls Star-Tribune. Michele Bachmann is the new Marilyn Musgrave.

Everything you need to know:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michele_Bac hmann


by AaronE on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 07:36:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

VT-AL (none / 0)

Numbers look great for us, but the poll asked for Welch v. Generic Republican.  The primary is next week and Rainville should win easily, I want to see the same poll with her as Welchs opponent.


Reid DeWolfe Book you should read: "All the Kings Men" by Robert Penn Warren
by Reid on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:07:58 PM EST

Re: VT-AL (none / 0)

I never bought this race being close, but maybe you are right. They should be doing more of these polls later on, post all primaries, so we shall see then.
by Chris Bowers on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:47:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Thirty New House Polls (3.00 / 1)

Wow.  Just, wow.  If I were a Republican insider right now, I'd be shitting my pants.  And if I worked for the majority on the Hill, I'd definitely be sending cover letters and resumes out about now.  

I am GLEEFUL!!!


McCain is defining Obama, and Obama is neither defining himself, nor McCain. This is awful.
by jgarcia on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:12:32 PM EST

North Carolina (3.00 / 1)

It is good to see Taylor still losing to Shuler. But, dammit I wish they would have done NC-08.  If the DCCC put some money into that race, then I am sure they would add it to the next poll.

This is great news.


BlueNC - Progressive NC Politics
by Robert P on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:14:02 PM EST

Re: North Carolina (none / 0)

Yes - It's a crying shame that NC-08 isn't on the list.  Kissell is within 3 points of Hayes even though Kissell's name ID is below 30%.  DCCC needs to think bigger - and make the November wave bigger.


Enough is enough!
by Bear83 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 10:35:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Twenty-Seven New House Polls (none / 0)

Re: Florida

Registered independents (called unaffiliated) may not vote for anything other than the judges and school board candidates that were on the ballot this primary, which would also affect turnout.  Bad rain in some areas esp south generally agreed to affect turnout, according to St Pete Times.
But in my opinion, it's the horrifically underwhelming and wimpy choice between the two candidates for governor that kept a lot of Dems home. The debate between the two candidates was a frikkin' joke. From the beginning I thought Crist was going to take this thing walking away, and that was before the debate when I realized he had NO competition on the Dem side whatsoever.


by rodean on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:24:48 PM EST

Re: Twenty-Seven New House Polls Indicate Democrat (none / 0)

As a resident Floridian, I say fairly confidently that the low Democratic turnout will be limited to the primary only.  First of all, you have two (relative) unknowns in a dem primary for governor and no primary competition for Bill Nelson.  Crist and Gallagher were much more visible in their primary fight than Davis and Smith.  Combine that with the fact that it's the day after labor day and there was bad weather plus a primary where there's not much to vote on and you get people staying home.  

November should be different because a)Harris is not popular (even among Republicans) which should suppress turnout among Republicans b)Crist's moderate stances on social issues will suppress conservative turnout c)Bill Nelson has a wad of cash to spend which will help him and Davis conceivably d)Seeing as Davis has much lower name recognition than Crist, to only be down 5 points (according to Rasmussen) two months from election day bodes well.

Just my two cents.  All that being said, yeah, we need to work our asses off to get Dems to the polls and make it happen.


by beeswax49 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:45:46 PM EST

PA-10 (3.00 / 1)

What's great about PA-10 is that it's completely outside the "wave" -- it's all on Sherwood's character, and if he's that low already, he's toast.


by Adam B on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:52:57 PM EST

Re: PA-10 (none / 0)

I hope this poll is reliable.  I'd have to see a few more like this to believe it.  If Chris wins it will be in part because anti republican sentiments are strong even here in this republican district.


DON'T COUNT THE VOTES, DON'T COUNT THE VOTES.... Obama and the Obamaettes... spring 2008
by TeresaINPennsylvania on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:26:37 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: PA-10 (none / 0)

It's all about Sherwood. The girlfriend, the assault, the lying about it - that just offends voters, especially when they've liked and trusted Sherwood before. When you break a trust with voters, there's usually no getting it back. That's where Sherwood is.


by phillydem on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 04:28:01 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Correction - FL 22 (none / 0)

should be Klein. I just got an invite to his kickoff bbq.

Chris, Dem turnout for the FL primaries was low, probably because of the torrential rains in Broward County. Also, Jeb  pumped a lot of money to try and unseat Villalobos, so there was a huge R turnout in that district. The governor's race was the big race and neither of the dem candidates had any name recognition here, in Broward. I couldn't even get the results on tv after the evening news. So you could just as easily say that tv coverage was low. Go figure.

What you can say for sure  is that Jeb can sure get out the vote. I'd hate to think that labor can't get their people to the polls. That would be bad. But our labor union unseated everyone on the school board that we wanted to get out, so I think we're in good shape down here.


Dare to be free.
by misscee on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 02:57:33 PM EST

What to do about PA-08 (none / 0)

What is Pat Murphy missing here?  Name recognition?  With the 'wave' in the Philadelphia Suburbs, I'd think Fitzpatrick would at least be below 50%.

Any thoughts?


by lutton on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:04:11 PM EST

Re: What to do about PA-08 (none / 0)

A bit of a sampling issue -- they have it at 51% R, 30% D, 19% Ind . . . when the district broke for Kerry in 2004 and Gore in 2000.

Indeed, Bucks County voter registration figures (almost all of the district) have it at 46% R, 39% D, 15% other.


by Adam B on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:16:04 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What to do about PA-08 (none / 0)

I should add that when I was out in PA-08 this past weekend, I was informed that Fitzpatrick's own internals show even worse numbers for him than Murphy's internals did (which was 44-38).


by PsiFighter37 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 05:14:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Internal polls (none / 0)

That's a good point about candidate internal polls.
If Fitzpatrick's numbers were good and showed him with that kind of lead, too, they'd be trumpeting their own polls to build the idea Fitzpatrick can't lose.

The fact that there have been no internal GOP polls released says something.


by phillydem on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 04:32:06 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What to do about PA-08 (none / 0)

Yeah, the partisan ID is way off. The district is registered 39-47-14 (D-R-other), but the partisan ID in this poll is 30-51-19. After partisan weighting, Fitzpatrick has .47*.76+.39*.21+.14*.43=.50 of the vote and Murphy has .47*.22+.39*.78+.14*.53=.48 of the vote (including leaners). With a 3.1 margin of error, I'll take 50-48 at this point.

But that's not the only weird thing about this poll. According to the internals, Fitzpatrick is leading 60-39 in the "South" of the district (Abington, Warwick, Wrightstown, Northampton, Ivyland, Lower Southampton, Middletown, Langhorne, Langhorne Manor, Penndel, Hulmeville, Bristol Twp., Bristol Bor., Bensalem, and Philadelphia), but Murphy and Fitzpatrick are tied 49-49 in the "North" of the district (everything else, from Falls to Milford). (The North contains 57% of the voters and the Sourth 43%.)

Even accounting for the increased margin-of-error in subsamples, these figures make absolutely no sense. Democrats are a plurality (45-43-12 D-R-I) in the South and Republicans are a substantial plurality (35-49-16 D-R-I) in the North, but the poll has the South 29-52-19 and the North 30-50-20. The sample is short 5% on Dems in the North and 16% in the South!! I don't have the Bush-Kerry numbers handy, but I know that Gore trounced Bush 56-41 in the South and lost 50-47 in the North. Every other race tracks this differential roughly.

Other North/South splits in this poll also make no sense. Bush's approval is probably higher than 33 in the North and (much) lower than 40 in the South. The adult population of the South is only 89% White (not 99% as in the poll).

Finally, the VMI index falls with age, which clearly can't be true.

This one poll is screwy enough that I suspect there was a serious data entry error somewhere along the line. I would put more faith in the Murphy internals and the thunderous silence of the Fitzpatrick campaign.


Race to 270: Tracking presidential elections since 2004.
by bschak on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 10:26:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What to do about PA-08 (none / 0)

okay...cool.  I've been wondering about this district and why the race - or rather the closeness of the race - hasn't been newsworthy down here in Philadelphia.

But maybe the 'news' hasn't yet seen the picture...

kudos to the reporter who starts asking some valid questions


by lutton on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 10:59:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: lower Bucks (none / 0)

While there might be a Dem plurality, these are pretty conservative Dems. That said, Pat Murphy should be their kind of guy: Catholic school grad, West Pointer, son of a cop, Irish. He's from the same family background as many of the lower Bucks residents who grew up in NE Phila and moved to the burbs for a "better life".


by phillydem on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 04:35:55 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: lower Bucks (none / 0)

Yeah, many parts of Lower Bucks and NE Philly have somewhat conservative Dems. But no Republican wins by anywhere near 21 points in the area defined Constituent Dynamics as the "South." Even popular moderate former Rep. Greenwood, facing token opposition in 2000 (I don't have 2002 figures), won the "South" by only 9 points while winning the "North" by 28 points.

Also, what Republicans there are in parts of Lower Bucks are very capable of voting for Democrats. For example: Bensalem is registered 43-45-12 D-R-I and has a Republican mayor and state legislators. However, Gore beat Bush in Bensalem by a whopping 60-36 margin.

It's not reasonable to think that Fitzpatrick is up by 21 in the "South" or that Murphy is tied in the "North," and it certainly isn't reasonable to think that both are happening at once. Something's very wrong with this poll.

(By the way, Patrick isn't a West Pointer, at least not as a cadet. He was ROTC at King's College and later was a professor at West Point.)


Race to 270: Tracking presidential elections since 2004.
by bschak on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 10:03:53 AM EST
[ Parent ]

A reason turnout was low for Dems (none / 0)

Dude, there's a pretty simple an obvious reason turnout was low among Dems.  It was raining in South Florida ALL DAY.  Even I didn't bother voting, because it was literally a torrential downpour during the hours the polls were open.  

It's true that a lack of competitive districts and a lack of excitement over gubernatorial choices had their impacts.   BUT DON'T FORGET THE RAIN.  That, and that alone, explains the disparity between Dems and GOP turnout.


by beyondo98 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:26:06 PM EST

True but Florida is red... (none / 0)

...generally speaking.


by MNPundit on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:34:39 PM EST
[ Parent ]

And the FDP is moribund (none / 0)

.....generally speaking


by adamterando on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:45:52 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: True but Florida is red... (none / 0)

I tend to think of Florida as purplish.


by beeswax49 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:48:05 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: A reason turnout was low for Dems (none / 0)

What if it rains in November?


Enough is enough!
by Bear83 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 10:33:17 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: A reason turnout was low for Dems (none / 0)

Don't worry. It hardly ever rains in Florida.


by falsified on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 12:36:09 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Flimsy support for Shaw (none / 0)

Hey man, you didn't check out the internals on the FL-22 poll before writing it off.  14% of Shaw's voters are listed as 'weakly committed'.  the problems remain numerous, not least of which is that the Democrat, alcee hastings, in the adjacent district has refused to endorse.  frankly, what a fucking prick?  first the guy participates in a gerrymandering that left his district and shaw's 40% apart in voter party ID so they'd each be guaranteed a seat, and now he won't support Klein.  fuckhead.


by beyondo98 on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:39:42 PM EST

Re: Flimsy support for Shaw (none / 0)

Agreed about Alcee Hastings. I might add that the guy was impeached and removed from his judgeship by Congress. He's an embarrassment to the party, and it's too bad he might get to chair a committee next term.


Race to 270: Tracking presidential elections since 2004.
by bschak on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 10:30:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Turnout issues (none / 0)

Based on the results in CA-50 and generally this year, I think we should be more optimistic about the districts where a plurality or near equality of the voters are now calling themselves "Democrats" and less hopeful about the districts where a margin of votes is based on carrying a large majority of the voters who are calling themselves "independent." I think we can count on those who count themselves as Democrats to turn out in large number this year. Those who call themselves "independents" are all to likely to have their disgust turn to non-voting as it did in CA-50.


by Wayne Miller on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:42:51 PM EST

Landslide Effect??? (none / 0)

With this much solid good news, I start wondering about a possible landslide effect.

Of course we should take nothing for granted.  But as the GOP focuses more and more attention on trying to save these seats, their resources get stretched, and it makes prospects even better for seats that aren't on this list.  A mass poll-release like this just has to have a significant psychological effect.

Say, I've got an idea!  Now that Pakistan has allied itself with the Taliban, maybe the GOP could get some al Qaeda pollwatchers in key Democratic precincts.  That could suppress Dem turnout something fierce.  Nothing says "stay home" on Election Day like a little bit of down home terrorism.


by Paul Rosenberg on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 03:43:04 PM EST

Re: Landslide Effect??? (none / 0)

Historically, one party or another has picked up at least 15 seats a little over half the time (56 out of 109 elections, excluding the 1789 original).  About 40% of those were wave elections (45 or more seat net pickups) with 2/3 of those occuring in non-Presidential years.

What makes a wave?  The biggest reason is the economy going sour (roughly 12 out of the 23).  We are overdue for some change.  The current streak of 5 straight elections with no net change of 15 or more seats is a record.

The biggest wave of all time, the 1894 election, saw Democrats lose 125 seats and Republicans gain 130 (the Populists lost 5) in a 357 seat House.  The major reason was the Panic of 1893 although Republicans issued a pamplet blaming Democrats for a) treason (during the Civil War which ended 29 years earlier) b) causing the recession by allowing the import of cheap foreign goods due to poor tariff policies and c) the usual crimes of inefficiency and patronage of the party in power.  Seems like every one of the jabs would apply to Republicans this year and more.

Former GOP Governor George Ryan was sentenced to 61/2 years today for bribery and corruption.  Among other things, Ryan funded his governor's campaign by selling commercial driver's licenses.  And, yes, people died.  Republicans lie; people die.  Gotta help in the Illinois sets on the chart.
Truman's Do Nothing Congress helped democrats in the House (+75 seats) and the Senate (+9) more than it did Truman.


by David Kowalski on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 09:54:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Doesn't seem right... (none / 0)

I love the results of this, but one poll has me confused.  CT-04 is an exact replay of 2004 - Diane Farrell challenging Chris Shays.  Farrell lost 52-48 (and had no oppertunity to whine and run as an independent afterwards).  Why would she lower in the polls on the Democrat-friendly year?  Especially with Bush so unpopular in CT now, unlike '04.


by John Nicosia on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:00:38 PM EST

Re: Doesn't seem right... (none / 0)

Maybe Shays resurrected himself calling for a timetable to get out of Iraq?


by Mimikatz on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:56:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Doesn't seem right... (none / 0)

Obviously, because now Chris Shays has the de facto endorsement of the second most popular Republican in the state — Joe Lieberman.

And because the Lieberman media blitz will suck the oxygen out of the media that the Farrel campaign needs to make its case to voters.  Of course Lieberman's field operation will also be turning out his most reliable supporters, those being Republicans.

Joe wags his fanger at you and says you "should have thought of that before you had a primary."


3.39/-3.27 * Save the Moderates
by ChetEdModerate on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 05:53:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Florida (none / 0)

Yet another agreeing no reason to freak about Florida turnout.  Harris vs. the Field and Crist/Gallagher were the marquee match-ups, which pushed the GOP turnout.

No worries.

I don't see Florida so much a "Red" state as "Pink."  The 600-vote difference between Bush & Gore was only six years ago.  There may be a "Jeb" bump but I don't think that will last forever.


by InigoMontoya on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:28:12 PM EST

house forcast update correction (none / 0)

I noticed a small error in your updated forecast.  You have CO-4 listed as a possible pickup and then again listed below in the other category.


by The Professor on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:33:49 PM EST

Re: house forcast update correction (none / 0)

That's CA-04 in the "others".  Doolittle vs Charlie Brown.


by Mimikatz on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 04:58:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Twenty-Seven (none / 0)

Looking at the latest polls, the best data I've seen yet, I would predict between four and six pick-ups and one loss (IL-8) resulting in no take over of the House.

I'm not at all being pessimistic -- I base this on two factors: one, polls that do not show a decisive Democratic advantage at this point will translate into Republican victories due to money issues, and the party faithful coming home at election time; two, Rove is setting the stage for a vote over security versus civil rights -- Americans don't give a shit about their rights (like the Russians, they will sacrifice rights for security and stability every time).

As for IL-8, Bean may have more money than the average Dem candidate, but she has lost her campaign volunteers.  It was not money that won the election last time, it was union members and other supporters walking the district and standing out front of grocery stores that won the election.  


by PageUp on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 05:29:01 PM EST

Re: Twenty-Seven (none / 0)

That is just absurd. Most of these challengers havd 20-25% name recognition right now. Between now and November 7th, their name ID's will double or tiple. Taht will cause them to rise in the polls dramatically.
by Chris Bowers on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 08:20:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Twenty-Seven (none / 0)

You're absolutely right, I've know "Generic Ballot" for years now!

Come on, who is being absurd here.  You have Democrats picking up seats where there are no candidates.

Any time a name is not there that can be instantly dismissed -- any time a seat is within ten points you can't declare a winner on September 6th.

It's this kind of thinking that allowed us to lose opportunities in Ohio and So. Cal.


by PageUp on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 09:58:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]

NY-20 (none / 0)

A new poll was released today showing that Kirsten Gillibrand is only 8 points behind John Sweeney.


by Colin Neal on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 06:35:05 PM EST

I'm very impressed with the Polling Methodology (none / 0)

(Cross posted in comments at Square State).

The nice thing is how nicely Majority Watch/RT Strategies/Constituent Dynamics displays their data. You can drill down to find the cross tabs. For example, clicking on the Partisan Identity bar gives you a PDF file with all the details.

I didn't have time to pursue things in depth, but here are a few interesting observations about CO-04 and CO-07. See RT Strategies Methodology Statement for more.

(1) 1000 person sample is higher than normal for district polls. This leads to 3% accuracy, and more confidence in the cross-tabs.

(2) The district map includes sub-districts, with the corresponding partisan index. So, we see that Larimer County portion of CO-04 is +10 Dem and the rest of the district is +13 Republican. Big warning to Perlmutter in CO-07: In the cross tabs, O'Donnell is doing better in the West Suburbs (50-44) when compared with the partisan index which shows Dems should be at +14. (I'm not sure how they compute the partisan index for the geographic cross-tabs).

(3) The Partisan Identity is "SELF-IDENTIFIED" partisan. The polled universe in both CO-04 and CO-07 identifies themselves as more Republican than the SOS registration numbers. To me this is a negative for the Dems as it indicates Republican sentiment is higher than the registration number, which is probably a lagging measure of partisan identity.

(4) Also more negative for the dems is the likely voter indication, which gives O'Donnell the edge 50 to 45. Most likely voter modeling is difficult in an off election, where turnout depends on partisanship and hot-button issues... hmm....like what???

(5) More hopeful is the partisan breakdown of the poll. For Perlmutter, the GOP support is 10% down when compared to either Dems or Indies. Musgrave loses 17% of the Republican vote to Paccione, while the big P loses onlly 7% of Dems to the <hiss> lady in pink <un-hiss>. Paccione wins Larimer 48-38, while Musgrave almost exactly flips this in Weld/Longmont/Plains.


There's more of us than there is of them.
by MetaData on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 07:47:19 PM EST

Re: I'm very impressed with the Polling Methodolog (none / 0)

Those crosstabs are most likely voters, not likely voters. The whole poll is likely voters.
by Chris Bowers on Wed Sep 06, 2006 at 08:23:03 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Sorry, I'm not sure what you mean (none / 0)

Please clarify a bit what you are trying to say.


There's more of us than there is of them.
by MetaData on Thu Sep 07, 2006 at 12:18:23 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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