Bush Is Up By Four
by Chris Bowers, Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 11:38:14 AM EDT
Our current poll (showing the President ahead by just over a point) includes a Saturday sample that is way out of synch with all the days before it and with the Sunday data that followed. In fact, Saturday's one-day sample showed a big day for Kerry while all the days surrounding it showed a decent lead for the President.
It seems likely that Saturday reflects a rogue sample (especially since it was over a holiday weekend). But, it remains in our 3-day rolling average for one more day (Tuesday's report). If we drop the Saturday sample from our data, Bush is currently ahead by about 4 percentage points in the Rasmussen Reports Tracking Poll.
That's still a smaller lead than shown by Time and Newsweek. Those polls appear to have the mirror image problem of a Los Angeles Times poll in June reportedly showing Kerry with a huge lead. That LA Times survey included too many Democrats in their sample. Today, it seems likely that Time and Newsweek included too many Republicans.
Time reports that Republicans will vote for Bush by an 89% to 9% margin; Democrats for Kerry by an 80% to 9% margin; and, unaffiliated voters for Bush 43% to 39%.
Four years ago, 35% of voters were Republicans, 39% were Democrats, and the rest were unaffiliated. If you apply those percentages to the Time internals, you find Bush up by about 3 percentage points. If you do the same with the Newsweek internal numbers, you find Bush with a six point lead. Those results are very close to the Rasmussen Reports data (excluding the Saturday sample).
All of this leads me to conclude that the President is currently ahead by 4 or 5 percentage points.
Combine this with Josh Marshall's inside info, and the new Gallup poll that shows Bush up 7 among LV's and 1 among RV's, and there can be little doubt about the current state of the race. Bush is up by four.This is fairly good news, since Bush up four immediately after his convention means that his peak--the best he can possibly do--is probably a four point lead. Further, it means that Kerry will probably once again be tied with Bush soon as the bounce fades, and a challenger tied with an incumbent is always the favorite. Personally, I would rather that Kerry was a couple points closer in order to maintain the level of confidence I have had about this election over the past three and a half months, especially considering that the withering attacks against Kerry are only going to get worse. But this will have to do, and this is where things stand. This is probably going to be a close election.
Tags: General 2008 (all tags)









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