US presidential candidate Barack Obama's lead in the polls increases
Saturday, July 26, 2008
After several days in Europe, Barack Obama has found his lead in the polls have increased by 2 percent over John McCain. This comes from a polling average that is produced on a daily basis from the polls conducted in the past week. On the 21st of July the polling average had Obama with a 1.5% lead over McCain, 45.8% to 44.3%. As of July 25, Obama is coming at 46.4% and John McCain at 42.9%. Obama has increased by 0.6% of voters, and John McCain has lost 1.4% of voters. The margin of error for the polling average is 0.87%, which means even if the error is added to McCain's column, Obama has a statistical lead. Because almost 11 percent of the population are undecided, and several months remain before the general election, it is too early to call a winner.
The Day to Day Politics Poll Average for the past week used the Gallup Tracking poll, the Rasmussen Tracking poll, the Fox News poll, and the NBC/WSJ poll.
Sources
- Paul Bell. "Obama's Europe trip boosts lead" — Day to Day Politics, July 26, 2008
- "Gallup Daily: Obama by 6, Is There a Europe Effect?" — The_Gallup_Organization, July 25, 2008
- Dana Blanton. "FOX News Poll: No Bounce for Obama From Overseas Trip" — Fox News, July 24, 2008
- Mark Murray. "NBC/WSJ Poll: Obama keeps lead over McCain" — MSNBC, July 23, 2008
- "Daily Presidential Tracking Poll" — Rasmussen Reports, July 26, 2008
External links
- Day to Day Politics Poll Average - 2008 Presidential Election
- Fox News Poll
- WSJ/NBC Poll
- Gallup
- Rasmussen Reports