Obama Takes Statistically Significant Lead in South Carolina
by Jonathan Singer, Tue Apr 10, 2007 at 08:44:30 AM EDT
The South Carolina Insider, a division of an Atlanta-based polling firm, has conducted what appears to be it's first survey in the Palmetto State, the results of which seem to upend the common wisdom about the state of the race in the fourth stop in the road to the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination. Lee Bandy has the details.
The Illinois senator's showing represents a complete turnaround for Obama who trailed in earlier South Carolina surveys.Today, Obama holds a comfortable lead in South Carolina, according to a new telephone poll.
He leads with 34 percent of the Democratic primary vote, followed by Clinton with 20 percent.
[...]
Obama was the overwhelming choice of blacks, winning [43]* percent of the African-American community, to 28 percent for Clinton.
There are a few things to note about this poll before reading too much into its results. First and foremost the poll, which has a margin of error of slightly more than plus or minus 4 percent and was in the field from Friday through Sunday, had a sample comprised of registered Democrats in South Carolina -- not likely voters. While it's not clear to me how a tighter screen on respondents would have affected the results of the poll, I'm fairly certain that it would have skewed the numbers one way or another because population of likely Democratic primary voters is significantly smaller than the population of Democrats in the state. Along the same lines, this poll could very well represent first impressions rather than hard support as voters simply are not as engaged today as they will be next January, let alone after the first debate in the state later this month. Finally, it's important not to read too much into a single poll.
That all said, these results do run at least somewhat contrary to the common wisdom about the race in South Carolina. And if these numbers hold -- or even grow -- South Carolina could stand as either a firewall or a momentum builder for Obama come January 2008.
Update [2007-4-10 14:26:22 by Jonathan Singer]: I might add that these numbers are quite different from polling from ARG and Emerson College back in February, both of which showed Clinton with a similarly sizeable lead. This could mean that there has been movement in the state -- but it could also mean that the latest survey is an outlier.
Tags: 2008, Democratic primaries, South Carolina (all tags)










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