Another Poll Points to a Tight Texas Race

A day after CNN released polling showing Hillary Clinton up just two points on Barack Obama in Texas, a state her campaign has put forward as a must-win, a new poll from SurveyUSA shows largely the same results. The results below, along with the latest Pollster.com trend estimate in the state in parens.

Hillary Clinton: 50 percent (49.6 percent)
Barack Obama: 45 percent (44.9 percent)

Here's some interesting analysis from the folks at SurveyUSA. Note, in particular, the couple of sentences after the "BUT":

In a Democratic Primary in Texas today, 02/18/08, 15 days to the vote, Hillary Clinton leads Barack Obama 50% to 45%, according to a SurveyUSA poll conducted exclusively for KTRK-TV Houston, KTVT-TV Dallas, and KRLD-AM radio Dallas. BUT: there is "give" in these numbers that must be mentioned in the same breath. Among Hispanic voters, Clinton leads 2:1. SurveyUSA estimates that Hispanics make-up 32% of Democratic primary voters in a Primary today. If Hispanics vote in larger numbers, Clinton's lead is larger than the 5 points shown here. If Hispanics vote in smaller numbers, Obama runs stronger than these numbers show. Among white voters, Clinton leads by 12. Among black voters, Obama leads by 57. Race Gap is 69 points. Among males, Obama leads by 20. Among females, Clinton leads by 27. Gender Gap is 47 points. Among registered Democrats, Clinton up 14. Among Independents, Obama up 28. Among voters under age 50, Obama by 6. Among Voters 50+, Clinton by 17. Age Gap is 23 points. Clinton ahead in South Texas and West Texas. Obama and Clinton within the margin of sampling error in North Texas, East Texas, and Central Texas.

It's a positive development to see a pollster concede that it doesn't know exactly how things are going to pan out, offering not one but multiple potential turnout models. Indeed, we are in a period in which polling hasn't been the most reliable -- largely because, I believe, turnout has increased so greatly over the past, with both new voters and voters new to Democratic primaries casting ballots for Obama and Clinton. This isn't to say that there isn't value in these numbers. In fact, SurveyUSA has been fairly good at predicting the margin of victory in contests thus far. Nevertheless, with so much riding on just who shows up to the polls (not to mention the way delegates are apportioned -- note that Texas has a funky system that could lead to a split between the popular vote leader and the delegate leader), I'mn not sure that I'd bet the farm on any numbers right now.



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Texas Primary FAQ (2.00 / 1)

For all those curious, I've done an exhausting Texas Primary FAQ post at Burnt Orange Report that answers any and all questions you may have (how the delegate process works, who's ahead in the polls, where/when to vote, etc) on the Texas primary:

Texas Primary FAQ

Hope it helps. I'll keep reading MyDD. I do agree with this author that polls/numbers are going to be hard to make anything out of anything --- there are so many splits (generational, ethnic, geographic) among voters that I can't imagine how anyone can accurately predict much of anything, beyond the fact that the primary is going to be very, very well attended!


Now a very great man once said that some people rob you with a fountain pen.
by Phillip Martin on Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 04:12:45 PM EST

Re: Another Poll Points to a Tight Texas Race (none / 0)

I've paid attention to the trends, but nearly every poll is absolute garbage.


Bill Foster would agree, Barack Obama has coat tails.
by Walt Starr on Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 04:17:33 PM EST

Re: Another Poll Points to a Tight Texas Race (none / 0)

Survey USA's turnout model sure nailed the record Latino turnout in California, even though many people scoffed at their prediction.


"Another problem we have...is that in election years we behave somewhat as primitive peoples do at the time of the full moon." --Harry Truman
by Steve M on Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 04:26:45 PM EST


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