New CNN & Zogby polls contradict DMR: What's going on?

New polls today by CNN and Zogby both put Clinton in first place.  What are the numbers and how can you explain the difference between these and the DMR poll?  More below the fold

Here's the CNN results:
Clinton 33
Obama 31
Edwards 22

And Zogby
Clinton 30
Obama 26
Edwards 25

How can the discrepancies between, on the one hand, these two polls and a half dozen other recent polls, all of which show Clinton or Edwards on top, and the DMR poll, which shows a big lead for Obama?

Well, I think they are explained by what can only be characterized as the bizarre findings of the DMR poll.  Here was the turnout in 2004 Democratic Iowa caucus according to exit polls:

Iowa Democratic Caucus 2004
Total Turnout: 124,000
Democrats: 99,200 (80%)
Independents: 23,560 (19%)
Republicans: 1240 (1%)

Well, according to the DMR poll, the percentage of Independents and Republicans caucusing in the Democratic caucus this year will leap to 40% and 5%.  Projecting a turnout of 200,000 people, which would be a huge leap, this means numbers such as the following:

Iowa Democratic Caucus 2008
Projected Total Turnout: 200,0000
Democrats: 110,000 (55%) [number up 11% from 2004]
Independents: 80,000 (40%) [number up 340% from 2004]
Republicans: 10,000 (5%) [number up 806% from 2004]

Look at the increased numbers from 2004.  They are, to put it mildly, very unusual.

The DMR's projection is not impossible, but it seems to me very unlikely.
 

Tags: 2008 ellection, Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, John Edwards (all tags)

Comments

75 Comments

Bizarre

I agree totally, bizarre. But we are talking about the DMR, which is very well respected. We'll just have to wait until Thursday night. This we all know for sure, we are looking at 3 man/woman race.

by lonnette33 2008-01-01 03:15AM | 0 recs
It has been noted

elsewhere in the blogosphere that the DMR did not get it right in the GE in 2004.  The predicted a Kerry victory (and had results outside the standard error.)

by Beltway Dem 2008-01-01 03:24AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

I didn't realize the DMR's reputation was based on it's general election predictions.

I was under the assumption that people looked to them for their Iowa expertise.

by Louverture 2008-01-01 03:31AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

they were polling iowa voters only, IN the national election. those were iowa figures.

the only papers that poll the whole nation are NYT/LAT, and they do it by buying into a poll or poll series with a national polling company.

by campskunk 2008-01-01 04:04AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

Just let all the Obamamanics have their fun taunting us with this DMR poll. Honestly, the polls in general have been all over the place for the past 2 to 3 months. There is no way JRE is sitting in third place with that low of a percentage. I just don't believe that.  This is still a 3 man/woman race. This MAY be the year DMR is wrong. We'll see come Thursday.

by lonnette33 2008-01-01 03:42AM | 0 recs
I think you're right...

This may just be the year when DMR polling turns out to be wrong. There's no way 45% of attendees to the DEMOCRATIC caucus will be non-Democrats, and there's no way Indie turnout increases over 300% while Dem turnout only increases 11%. As I said upthread, the numbers just make no sense. The Edwards Campaign is right to challenge these crazy numbers, and the Caucus may ultimately prove these numbers wrong. ;-)

by atdleft 2008-01-01 05:37AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

Before this poll, everyone was screaming about how Edwards is on the rise, Obama has peaked, and individual polls proved this, oh and Edwards fundraising numbers proved it too. And the DMR poll was going to prove that Edwards was rising too.

Now it's all "oh it's a 3-way race, Obama fans are just taunting us." Funny how attitudes can change so quickly.

(For the record, I still think it's a 3-way race, like I thought before this poll. It's nice to see more analysis and less rabid hyping though.)

by Nautilator 2008-01-01 08:37AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

Just let all the Obamamanics have their fun taunting us with this DMR poll. Honestly, the polls in general have been all over the place for the past 2 to 3 months. There is no way JRE is sitting in third place with that low of a percentage. I just don't believe that.  This is still a 3 man/woman race. This MAY be the year DMR is wrong. We'll see come Thursday.

by lonnette33 2008-01-01 03:42AM | 0 recs
Re: It has been noted

Not quite true.  The final Des Moines Reigster poll in 2004 showed Kerry beating Bush 48%-45%.  That's a 3-point lead with a 3.5% margin of error.  So yes, they predicted a Kerry victory, but it wasn't outside the margin of error.

(I think you meant margin of error instead of standard error.)

by BruinKid 2008-01-01 08:04AM | 0 recs
Well, I usually respect DMR polling...

But this is just bizarre! Really, 45% of DEMOCRATIC caucusgoers will NOT be Democrats?! That makes no sense. As Mark pointed out in this diary, there's no way Indie turnout increases over 300% from 2004 while Dem turnout only increases 11%. Again, it makes no sense. As much as I hate to say this, I think the DMR poll is an outlier. It contradicts everything else coming out of Iowa, and its voter turnout model is just simply screwy.

by atdleft 2008-01-01 05:32AM | 0 recs
Re: Well, I usually respect DMR polling...

I sure want those indies voting for the Dem. nominee in November.

by howardpark 2008-01-01 05:56AM | 0 recs
Re: Well, I usually respect DMR polling...

"I sure want those indies voting for the Dem. nominee in November."--howardpark

Not at the price of Democrats no longer controlling the core agenda of their party and possibly being led by a Trojan Horse of a would be president Obama who has no core identity or true aligence to anyone but his image.

by superetendar 2008-01-01 10:49AM | 0 recs
The expectation game just raised

This poll has enormously raised the expectation game for Obama. A loss would have a huge deflationary affect on his campaign. And it's all based on a poll from the DMR predicting a colossal turnout both in total and by independants and Republicans in a democratic caucus. All this despite the fact that there is a hell of a fight going on in the Republican camp which would attract Republicans and Republican leaning indies. It doesn't play in Peoria.

by ottovbvs 2008-01-01 04:13AM | 0 recs
Another thought: mind concentration.

I also have a feeling these numbers being publicised in the state are going to concentrate a few democratic minds. If a lot of trad democrats believe Obama could beat Clinton they are more likely to turn out and perhaps be less willing to make Quixotic gestures. If you look at Clinton's numbers she does exceptionally well with democrats and they are the ones with the biggest stake in an electable nominee. We'll see.  

by ottovbvs 2008-01-01 04:20AM | 0 recs
What I take from all of the

numbers is this:

I think Clinton is somewhere between 28 and 32 (If I look at all of the numbers and not just the two you cite here).

My read is that the real fight is between Edwards and Obama.  If they split evenly, Clinton will win.  If one is to get a marginal advantage over the other, they win Iowa and New Hampshire and will lead nationally going into Nevada.

All along my take has been that Clinton's numbers are low for a front runner, and I don't think she is likely to get north of 32.

I don't think that is going to be enough. In the end, I believe Edwards is going to win as concerns over Obama's experience mount.  

Who knows, though.

by fladem 2008-01-01 04:39AM | 0 recs
Re: What I take from all of the polls

Different turn out models

ARG turnout model a 134,000 turn out, the DMR TURNOUT MODEL IS 150,000.

ny times indicated that all 3 campaigns agreed to the following turn outs:

125000- 130,000 Edwards the winner
130,00-140,000 Clinton the winner
140,000 + Obama the winner.

Finally turnout in 2004 was 125,000

With the ground games of the 6 democratic candidates, Gov. Culver indicated that an increase of 20,000 or more is what he expects.

ARG,zOGBY and Rasmussen have never had Obama IN THE LEAD IN IA nor has CNN in all of their polling in the last 3-4 months.

sTRATEGIC vISION, abc/post poll AND DMR have had Obama IN THE LEAD.

by BDM 2008-01-01 04:45AM | 0 recs
you're telling me

that turnout may be 150,000, but 60 percent of those will be first-time caucus-goers.

No way, no chance.

I've contacted just about all of the 175 people who showed up to caucus in my precinct in 2004. Of course, a few had died or moved away since then. A few more won't be able to attend this year because they'll be out of town or whatever. But there are also people who didn't attend in 2004 for flukey reasons (foot surgery, out of town), who normally go to the caucuses and will be there this year.

I would say that at least 140 to 150 of the people who attended our caucus in 2004 will be there on Thursday night.

If we are to believe the DMR, 60 percent of caucus-goers will be first-timers. That means that either a lot of regulars are lying when they say they'll show up, or the total turnout will shatter the record. We'd have to have over 300 people in the room to have 60 percent of the caucus-goers be there for the first time.

And that would suggest a statewide turnout of way more than 150,000.

I am not buying it.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 05:01AM | 0 recs
Re: you're telling me

The turnout will be around 180,000 from my estimate. You guys are underestimating the hunger for change and Obama organizational prowess. This guy has surprised us before.

by Jr1886 2008-01-01 05:06AM | 0 recs
ok, let's say turnout is 180,000

According to the DMR model, 108,000 of those would be first-time caucus-goers, and 72,000 would be people who have attended a caucus before.

So of the 124,000 people who attended the Democratic caucus in 2004, more than a third will just sit this one out?

No chance.

Let's say turnout is 200,000. The DMR model says 120,000 would be first-timers, and just 80,000 would be people who have attended a caucus before. A third of those who went to the Democratic caucuses in 2004 are just not going to show up?

No, I am not buying it.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 05:59AM | 0 recs
Re: you're telling me

i HAVE PUT THAT TURN OUT QUESTION TO mARK bLUMENTHAL

Also:

What I can say is that when we polled campaign and media pollsters last week, the Des Moines Register and Selzer were the runaway winners as the most trusted Iowa poll. My hunch is that their reputation results partly from an awareness of their past success and methods but mostly to an appreciation of what is at stake for the pollsters. Selzer is a Des Moines based researcher, and this survey is easily the most important her company has conducted since their last pre-caucus poll in 2004. Under those circumstances, other pollsters trust her to sweat the details.

Having said that, we all know that the conditions for survey research are treacherous this week, and even the best pollsters (and methods) are fallible even under the best of conditions. But with everything on the line, Selzer has done what good pollsters are trained to do: She put her trust in her methods and the results they produced, even when those results contradict conventional wisdom.

by BDM 2008-01-01 05:10AM | 0 recs
Re: you're telling me

A little algebra ...

If 80% of 2004 caucus-goers return, and 60% of this year's are newbies ... we get ...

Turnout of 250,000.

150k new caucus goers, 100k returners. 2/3 of the new ones will be Indies or Repubs.

In other news, Hell froze over yesterday.

by ColoradoGuy 2008-01-01 06:54AM | 0 recs
Mr guess is that turnout

is lower than the models are predicting - which would be good news for Clinton only if the Obama/Edwards split holds.

I just don't think it will.  

Have to catch a plane - but I think Obama is playing the role Clark played in NH last year.  It was Clark who first closed on Dean in NH.  Clark was a sitting place for those who didn't want to vote for Dean, but couldn't find an alternative.

Obama has been a holding place for people who didn't want to vote for Clinton.  He will decline as concerns about his experience grow closer to the actual caucus.  I think this means there will be movement to Edwards.

by fladem 2008-01-01 05:06AM | 0 recs
DMR could be right

but at the same time, as you say, it is unlikely and it is irresponsible to report these numbers they have come up with in some sort of bizarre wishful thinking.

by MollieBradford 2008-01-01 04:43AM | 0 recs
Re: I believe DMR poll and Wapo/ABC

two of the most respected plling firm in the business. How Ironic now Hillary fans find themselve whining and criticizing the polls just because they don't like the results? I can remember as of yesterday, Obama was dead and the DMR last poll was supposed to be the final nail in the coffin. And they were all expecting good news for Hillary. It doesn't surprised me now, they are trying to trash the DMR poll.

Good analysis from Chris Bowers http://openleft.com/frontPage.do. We warned you the Obama fans were out of town for Xmas and they are back.

by Jr1886 2008-01-01 05:04AM | 0 recs
Re: I believe DMR poll and Wapo/ABC

Live by the poll, die by the poll.  Didn't somebody post that the DMR poll had "major movement" for Hillary and that she would be up by 9 points.  I respect the Edwards people on here they tend to be motivated by issues and his passonate populism. Elizabeth wins my vote as the best candidate spouse.

In contrast, many Clinton bloggers have been unbelievably smug & arrogent in hyping the inevitably of thier candidate and relentlessly negative about the slightest miscue by Obama.  They seem to think they can win it alone and that other Democrats have no place in thier tent.  Hillary Clinton is still the frontrunner and I'll support her enthusiastically because she would be a fine President -- but unity will happen only when her campaign listens to, and respects, the rest of us.  

I think it's still a three way tie in Iowa.

by howardpark 2008-01-01 06:09AM | 0 recs
Re: I believe DMR poll and Wapo/ABC

Didn't somebody post that the DMR poll had "major movement" for Hillary and that she would be up by 9 points?

Yes, that was "Louverture", an Obama supporter (and possibly) a sockpuppet for an infamous and banned Obama supporter.

You guys make a great 1-2 punch.  

by markjay 2008-01-01 07:00AM | 0 recs
Re: I believe DMR poll and Wapo/ABC
most of the people questioning this poll are edwards supporters.  And I don't see any whining or complaining.  What I am seeing is that DMR has changed their turn out model to something that seems  rather extreme.  Do they have any reason for that is what we would like to know.
So stop with your childish triumphalism and try to address the actual conversation.
by MollieBradford 2008-01-01 10:57AM | 0 recs
Re: New CNN &

Well the polls have always been all over the place- if you remember, in maybe sept., Obama jumped to first and then was third in the next one, and that happened again over a month ago- but this DM is very respected.

The real value in the poll for the Obama campaign is it's psychological value- they want the Clinton and Edwards supporters to give up over it, give in to despair, make a half-heart effort to both campaign and caucus- that ensures their victory if you do that.  Surprise results have happened in the past and could happen still here, but surely not if people give up, which is exactly what they want.

by reasonwarrior 2008-01-01 05:16AM | 0 recs
yes, this is a shot in the arm

for the Obama people. You can bet their internals have been nothing like this, or else Obama would not be criticizing Edwards on the stump.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 06:01AM | 0 recs
Re: yes, this is a shot in the arm

It's wierd isn't it? Obama's campaign hasn't been acting like they're the frontrunner at all. IMO, they've been acting like they're trying to keep from coming in third.

by Ga6thDem 2008-01-01 07:13AM | 0 recs
Re: yes, this is a shot in the arm

Yes, unfortunately, that led many people to surmise he had seen the DM poll, which made us think it was favorable to Edwards or Clinton- which it obviously wasn't.  We were too quick to believe that meant he was going to be third- but let's not make the same mistake and be too quick to believe the DM poll means he is actually going to win as they indicate.  Appearances may be deceiving enough to go all the way around.

by reasonwarrior 2008-01-01 08:09AM | 0 recs
Re: New CNN & Zogby polls contradict DMR:

Is it just me or does this poll's turnout method imply that the number of first time caucus goers would NOT be democrats? It seems kind of weird that independants and republicans would be motivated to turn out more but not democrats.

by world dictator 2008-01-01 06:04AM | 0 recs
Re: New CNN & Zogby polls contradict

Well we'll see if the pollsters at the DMR are really the Iowa poll to trust come Caucus time. I can't see 45% of the Democratic primary vote being non Democrats. Now if they said 30% or so they could have sold me on that, but since Democratic turnout will likely increase as well as independent turnout I don't see how the preportion of non Democrats doubles. I still think anyone can come in first, and anyone can come in third.

by Christopher Lib 2008-01-01 06:22AM | 0 recs
Re: New CNN & Zogby polls

It's worth noting that while the DMR's assumptions are striking, they also lead to the result of Obama winning by a LOT.  They don't necessarily have to come 100% true for Obama to be the winner.  (Of course, the usual caveats concerning the structure of the caucus system apply; this is still a statewide poll.)

For example, the DMR poll has Obama behind Clinton by 6 points among Democrats, but ahead by a whopping 24 points among Independents.  Now, let's assume the turnout is just like it was in 2004: 80% Democrats, 20% Independents.  In other words, we will assume Obama has NO ability to turn out extra Democrats beyond what we saw in 2004.  The results of this hypothetical: a statistical tie between Clinton and Obama.

Therefore, any aptitude whatsoever for turning out Independents on Obama's part - even if he can increase their proportion by a mere 5% instead of the 20% the DMR assumes - would give him a lead over Clinton under the same polling methodology.  Of course, given the caucus structure, that doesn't necessarily add up to a win, but it's still worth considering.

by Steve M 2008-01-01 07:02AM | 0 recs
well, most reasonable people

would consider this a tossup. I like Edwards' chances, but I could make an argument for why obama will win or why Clinton will win.

That said, the assumptions underlying this DMR poll seem way off. There is no way 60 percent of people who caucus on Thursday will be people who have never done it before.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 07:09AM | 0 recs
Re: well, most reasonable people

It also seems significant to me that Independents have a choice of 2 caucuses this year, unlike in 2004 when there was no contest on the Republican side.  You'd think that would tend to lower the Independent numbers for our caucus.

by Steve M 2008-01-01 08:00AM | 0 recs
Re: well, most reasonable people

On the surface yes, but when you look at the choices on the Republican side, then no.  And clearly the mood of Iowa at least is they want change, that's why all the candidates have shifted their messages to change.  The group of Democrats far and above of the group of Republicans represent a change from the status quo, and change has been Obama's theme from the start.

by Piuma 2008-01-01 08:17AM | 0 recs
Re: well, most reasonable people

I don't think that makes much sense.  The Republican side has McCain and Huckabee, which should both be pretty big draws to Independents in a generally Republican-leaning state.

by georgep 2008-01-01 09:44AM | 0 recs
Re: well, most reasonable people

You're overgeneralizing here.  Not every Independent voter is squarely on the fence.  Even if we assume our field is sexier and a whopping 70% of Independents participate in the D caucus, the missing 30% is still a lot of missing 2004 participants that need to be made up for.

by Steve M 2008-01-01 10:04AM | 0 recs
Re: well, most reasonable people

I know you keep saying that, but isn't that what they are finding with their polling?   As an Obama supporter I can understand how that can be true without knowing anything about Iowa.  Obama has been inspirational and his campaign very effective of transforming the inspired into the active.  As someone who suddenly finds himself volunteering for a campaign when I've never done that before, and being in the majority with the other volunteers I meet, I don't find the Selzer model hard to believe.

by Piuma 2008-01-01 08:14AM | 0 recs
Re:

I am not buying the Edwards numbers in the DMR poll. They seem way too low in the DMR Register to everything else we have seen recently.   I think you are right, Mark, that projecting that 45% of caucus-goers in the Iowa caucus to be NON-DEMOCRATS is extremely unlikely, downright bizarre.  That assumes that DEMOCRATS will just stay home in droves (given the massive increase of Independents participating projected,) which does not seem to have a basis in reality in this particular cycle.   It is not about the total number projected (we might just see 200,000,) but about the partisan makeup of those participating.  No way virtually HALF of all participants in Democratic caucuses will be NON-Democrats.  That is where the DMR errs, but we'll see soon enough.

This makes the expectations going into the Iowa caucuses clear:  Obama must win the Iowa caucus, and roughly by the 7% suggested by the DMR, or else the expectations will not be fulfilled and he loses tons of support overnight, is most likely going to be hit with a devastating blow overnight.  Second is clearly not enough for Obama anymore.   It is now win or bust.    

by georgep 2008-01-01 07:10AM | 0 recs
I agree with the first paragraph

but Obama doesn't need to win Iowa. A close second to Edwards would be fine for him.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 07:18AM | 0 recs
Re:

That last paragraph is nuts. Thats pure Hillary campaign spin.

The expectations are not determined by one poll GeorgeEP! All the coverage we are seeing of the Iowa caucuses makes clear that its a toss up between three candidates! I think everyone knows that Hillary and Edwards have a good shot at winning Iowa. And to argue that Obama has to win by 7 points? Thats completely ludicrous.

Honestly I am surprised at you. You are better than that...

by crackityjones 2008-01-01 04:14PM | 0 recs
Re:

I really don't think you have been paying attention to the way the media has played this.  I am not at all peeved at them, that is what they do.  They love the narrative.   Ever since the ABC/WaPo poll showing Obama in the lead came out, the polls that showed good news for Obama were talked up, with the polls that showed Clinton in the lead not at all mentioned, or very little.  We have seen that for over a month now.  I have paid pretty close attention to that process, actually.  So, we have the appearance of a surging Obama, a frontrunning Obama, as created by the media, when indeed the polls have been all over the place, and actually, overall, have slightly favored Clinton, thus her regaining the overall aggregate lead again.  I don't mind if you disagree here, but that is how I see how the media narrative has effected the race, IMHO in a negative way for Obama, unless he can deliver in Iowa.   The DMR poll has definitely put this thing clearly in Obama's lap, and if he can follow-through, he'll have delivered.  If not, he'll be damaged, as it would start an entire discussion about his viability in other states (can't bring out the voters he needs to show up, might not be strong enough in the demogroups he needs to put together, etc.)

by georgep 2008-01-01 06:03PM | 0 recs
contradict DMR

Yes, indeed, this wildly out-of-sync DMR poll absolutely stinks of the MSM/Russert/Williams/Matthews anti-Clinton invective.  And that although the DMR endorsed Senator Clinton.

But here is the obvious fact: this poll is indicating that NOT Democrats but rather Independents and Republicans in primaries that need not pay any heed to their own partisans are coallescing for Senator Obama.

As we who support Senator Clinton have long maintained, that is what makes both Iowa and New Hampshire supremely unrepresentative of most all of the remaining, truly Democratic primaries.

It is why Senator Clinton maintains huge leads nationally in virtually all polling, after a full year.  

And why the dynamic for the Democratic nomination simply will not change regardless of what the MSM and their fellow Clinton haters in the blogosphere attempt to do with any results out of either Iowa and New Hampshire.

Iowa and New Hampshire notwithstanding, bedrock Democrats voting in traditional non-cross-over primaries--which are the great bulk of them--are not going to desert the Clintons for a three-year Senate neophyte out of Illinois.

If on January 3 there were a national Democratic primary, Senator Hillary Clinton would be the nominee of her party before nightfall.

Everyone knows this--the MSM and even the most passionate of Clinton haters.

So the matter of how to change that dynamic came down to vaulting into higher significance than ever before both Iowa and New Hampshire--with their scores of cross-over nontraditional voters.  

Only by magnifying those entirely unrepresentative states could the Clinton loathing find some opening, some hope that traditional Democrats would abandon the Clintons.  

And thus fulfill the dream of the MSM, who, like the scores of unrepresentative samples indicated in this bizarre DMR poll, have spent fifteen years doing all they can to turn the country away from the Clintons.

Now, breathe deeply and consider this DMR poll narrative.  It states, uncategorically, that record numbers of independents and Republicans, voting in a Democratic caucus, want the DEMOCRATS to turn away from Senator Hillary Clinton and cast their lot with Senator Barack Obama!

Put another way, supposing we Democrats were to use the same subterfuge against Republicans in a primary of theirs in which the legacy of Ronald Reagan was itself a candidate.

Indeed, scores of Democrats and Independents could indeed show their disapproval of the Reagan legacy, by way of such cross-over voting.  And much fanfare could be made of that fact.

However, in the end, REPUBLICANS in traditional non-cross-over primaries would not then follow suit and disavow the legacy of Ronald Reagan.

Which is why the DMR poll, bizarre in its sample, only reveals the absurdity of a Democratic Primary judged by the standards of an Iowa caucus, or even of a cross-over New Hampshire primary for that matter.

Judging from virtually every other polling firm, using traditional methodology, there is a very close race in Iowa among the top three contenders in the Democratic Primary.  

And most all such polling gives an edge to Senator Clinton.  Thus, she does indeed have a very good chance of winning in Iowa.

But if the skewered methdology of the DMR poll is to be considered on its face, then the result on January 3 will still be that a clear majority of DEMOCRATS want Senator Clinton to be their nominee, whereas a clear majority of NON-DEMOCRATS want Senator Obama to be the nominee of the DEMOCRAT PRIMARY.

In the end, regardless of all the anti-Clinton invective spewed forth by the MSM talking-heads before and after January 3 and January 5, Senator Clinton will still become the DEMOCRAT choice for the DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION.

Sorry, indies and Republicans, we bedrock Democrats still love the Clintons.  So if you yet want your three-year Senate neophyte Barack Obama to represent you, we suggest that the rest of you find your own party in which to nominate him.

The DMR poll can over-represent your significance in Iowa.  But it can do you no good in over-representing you in the selection of a Democratic nominee by the truly DEMOCRATIC PARTY.

by lambros 2008-01-01 07:35AM | 0 recs
Re: contradict DMR

Yup. I'm a Democrat. I don't want independents and Republicans picking my party's nominee, and I'm very skeptical about a candidate who's more concerned about getting indy and GOP votes instead of caring about Democratic voters and values.

by LakersFan 2008-01-01 08:27AM | 0 recs
Re: contradict DMR

A statement like this shows no respect for the Party.  There isn't a single Democratic politician who had a greater positive impact on the 2006 races as a whole than Barack Obama.

by Piuma 2008-01-01 08:35AM | 0 recs
Re: contradict DMR

A non-quantifiable statement. Kerry, Clinton and Edwards, Obama all did great work in fund raising and campaign appearances. Seeing that some gave more to the party and some had more appearances it is impossible to claim that any one of them was the single Democratic politician who had a greater positive impact on the 2006 races as a whole

Pure wishful thinking based on candidate preference.

by Ernst 2008-01-01 01:55PM | 0 recs
Re: contradict DMR

Democrats make up about 35% of the country right now, with independents being about 40% and republicans 25%.

Are you seriously suggesting that being concerned with what 35% of the country believes is enough, while independents are not significant enough to pay attention to?

by Nautilator 2008-01-01 11:46AM | 0 recs
Re: contradict DMR

I don't think anyone running for the Democratic nomination should spend their time sucking up to independents and Republicans. Voters who don't believe in what Democrats stand for shouldn't be a part of our nomination process.

by LakersFan 2008-01-01 12:53PM | 0 recs
Momentum

The idea that Obama has momentum is also false. Obama only picked up support in their latest poll because they increased the amount of independents and first time caucusgoers dramatically. Edwards, who went up 1%, probably went up much more than that with a lower turnout.

by Progressive America 2008-01-01 07:38AM | 0 recs
Re: Momentum

Obama has been significantly outdrawing his opponents in campaign appearances this week.  There was a stark example near Davenport this week when Obama and Edwards were going head to head in the same town at the same time and Obama outdrew him 900 to 300.  People gave all sorts of excuses for that but we saw it throughout the state.  People are turning out so the momentum is clearly there.

by Piuma 2008-01-01 08:20AM | 0 recs
Re: Momentum

Dean had huge crowds too. So did Mondale. The crowd numbers don't mean anything.

by Ga6thDem 2008-01-01 08:36AM | 0 recs
Re: Momentum

They mean something, not everything, but a far cry from nothing.  It is an indication of momentum but it's up to Obama to seal the deal.  

by Piuma 2008-01-01 08:43AM | 0 recs
Re: Momentum

They mean nothing more than he had crowds. That's all. It doesn't translate into votes or support or anything else.

by Ga6thDem 2008-01-01 09:09AM | 0 recs
Re: Momentum

very good point.

by MollieBradford 2008-01-01 11:15AM | 0 recs
Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

According to a Pollster.com survey of respected Iowa pollsters.

Whatever the polls say, as I've been arguing for a while now, they are MEANINGLESS. It's just sad to see that when an outfit such as ARG reports that Clinton is ahead by 15 points, everyone here takes it as gospel. But now that their candidate isn't looking too hot, the polls are no longer to be trusted.

This will come down to 1) turn out 2) whether all of these new Independents will actually caucus and 3) second choice votes.

by highgrade 2008-01-01 10:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

Preposterous.  I have not seen a single poster treat the ARG Iowa poll showing a 14% lead as gospel.  A week later the race was cut to 7% via ARG, which makes a lot more sense (given that Zogby showed a 4% race.)  

The truth is that it is Obama who is not looking too hot in every poll except the DMR poll (which seems to be banking on a bizarre Democrats vs. non-Democrats turnout model.)  The aggregate of all polls shows Clinton ahead, whereas just a week ago Obama was ahead by 3.5%.  

The problem for Obama here is that despite most polls showing dicy numbers for him, he is now the media-anointed frontrunner and in a definite must-win situation, and he also has to win convincingly now.  If he ends up only second or third, his campaign will receive a very strong negative blow, perhaps one that is near impossible to recover from.  

by georgep 2008-01-01 10:36AM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

Which poll has shown Obama AHEAD AND NOW HAS cLINTON AHEAD:

Zogby has never had Obama ahead
CNN has never had Obama AHEAD
ARG HAD oBAMA ahead in one poll, but have had Clinton ahead in 11 polls
rASMUSSEN HAS NEVER HAD oBAMA ahead in it;s IA polling.

Strategic Vision, Wash/Post ABC. AND  DMR have had Obama IN THE LEAD.

arg has a turnout model of 134,000 attemdee's. DMR TURNOUT MODEL IS 150,000 ATTENDEE'S

ia CAUCUS 2004 was 124,000 Attendee's

Governor Culver who is neutral say's with the top 6 candidates ground game, 20,000 + IS VERY LIKELY.

tHIS WOULD PUT TURNOUT CLOSE TO 150,000

by BDM 2008-01-01 10:55AM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

DMR has INDIES AND REPUBLICANS make up 45% of the Iowa caucus.  Indies had 15% in 2000 and 19% in 2004, Republicans had 1%  both times. In 2004 Republicans were not even holding their caucus on the same day.   That seems to make no sense at all.  I don't doubt that this time around we see more turnout than last time, but it is not likely to be fed entirely by Indies.  Democrats will turn out in large numbers.

As for the other polls:  The Insider Advantage makes a good example.  The Quad City Times poll is another one.  However, I have not said that a poll had Obama ahead and now has Clinton ahead.  I said that the other polls (outside of DMR) don't show good news for Obama (the frontrunner,) which is true:

Strategic Vision

The most Hillary-averse poll shows numbers moving away from Obama in rapid fashion.  Obama has led this poll with 8% and 7% a few weeks ago, now it is tied.  Trends look to be way down for Obama.

Insider Advantage

Two weeks ago they showed Obama AHEAD 27% with Edwards at 26% and Clinton at 24%.  Now?  Clinton at 30% (+6%) Edwards at 29%, Obama at 22% (-6%)

Zogby/C-Span/Reuters

Steady Clinton lead (margin 4%) with no apparent upward movement from Obama

CNN

Continued steady Clinton lead (margin 2%)

Quad City Times

Now a tie, whereas the previous result showed Obama ahead by a whopping 9%.  Trend here also way down for Obama, having lost 9% in this polling universe in less than 2 weeks.

LA Times Bloomberg

Clinton leads by 6% over Edwards, 9% over Obama.

ARG

7% Clinton lead.

Rasmussen

4% Clinton lead.

Look at the findings and trends, as shown right here:

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/ 2008/president/ia/iowa_democratic_caucus -208.html#polls

Now, if we accept that Obama is the frontrunner in Iowa, why don't YOU show me the good news contained for Obama in any of these 8 latest polls that all seem to contradict the DMR's findings?

by georgep 2008-01-01 11:25AM | 0 recs
oh man, don't mess with georgep

when it comes to polls and polling trends!

I don't pay too much attention to any one poll. The totality of the polling suggests a close race at the top, and the ground game will decide.

I do object to so much importance being attached to the DMR poll when certain assumptions (60 percent first-time caucus-goers, 40 percent independents) are so out of line with experience.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 11:52AM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

IT DEPENDS ON THEIR MODEL

ARG model is 134.000 turn out. The DMR MODEL IS 150,000 TURNOUT

I believe the CNN MODEL IS CLOSE TO 140,000 TURNOUT

The results are consistent with their turn out models

A recent Ny times article said that their sources from all three campaigns agrees to the following:

125.000-130,000 turn out then Edwards win's
131,000- 140,000 turn out then Clinton wins
141,000 and above turn out then Obama win's

by BDM 2008-01-01 02:38PM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

I think most rational people would agree that thus far the race is pretty much a dead heat. I'm not going to get into every different poll cause it's really a pointless exercise. My problem is with the tendency on mydd - look at the recommended diaries - and other liberal blogs, selectively feauturing polls based on whether they report good news for Hillary. The fact is that the DMR is much more widely respected, at least by Iowan pollsters, than ARG, Zogby (the two LEAST respected outfits).

I think you're creating a narrative that you wish were true, rather than one based on any objective analysis. The fact is that Obama has as much cash to spend as Hillary and can very easily continue long after Iowa. Hillary is the same. Being the media front runner for 2 days before the vote, in my opinion, doesn't compare to being the front runner for most of the entire year. If Obama loses in Iowa AND NH, then I would agree with you. But I think either can survive an Iowa loss.

by highgrade 2008-01-01 01:28PM | 0 recs
Re: Zogby is least trusted along with ARG

Point is in promoting your narrative about the DMR and it's reception here you are fantasizing out of thin air that the ARG poll was heralded as highly credible, while it was in fact wildly regarded as an outlier by an undependable polling firm by opponents and supporters alike.

the DMR is divergent from all other polls based on an unusual likely voter model. Had it been done by the ARG or zogby it would've been written off as an outlier immediately instead of sparking a discussion about it's voter model.

Your problem doesn't ring true to me, seeing the fact that everybody can start up a diary and all analysis is done by amateurs I think the quality of the rec list is quite reasonable. It does feature a certain Clinton bias in it's and writers subjects but that's because overall the polls over the last year generally have been quite good for Clinton. The only place where it's a dead heat right now is Iowa with New Hampshire getting more so every day. Any rational people would agree that the polls so far concerning the race have been in Clinton's favor.

How much of that remains after the caucus and early primaries remains to be seen. But based on the polling of the last year Clinton has been certainly the favorite.

That doesn't mean that other candidates won't have a chance. (I certainly hope that they do, I'm roting for an underdog candidate.) but it does explain the more frequent Clinton polling diaries.

by Ernst 2008-01-01 02:16PM | 0 recs
the only people I have seen

treating out lier as gospel have been Obama people. In general, both Clinton and Edwards supporters talk about how they need to see a few more polls to verify the results.

by MollieBradford 2008-01-01 11:22AM | 0 recs
Obama is over polling in my opinion

I have said this before.

There is an anti-Clinton vote.  Small in the Democrat party and he splits that with Edwards.

Its gets bigger with the independents and it is of course large with Republicans.

I think when some are reached at home and asked to take part in the poll they cast their vote against Clinton and move to the anti Clinton candidate the media has created.  Obama.  But taking a phone poll is an easy thing for a Fox News watching couch potato to do.   Getting out to the caucus or the primary is another thing all together.

You also have the youth vote.  It is easy to wear a t-shirt and follow your friend to a rally.  But again, caucusing on Thurs. night during a holiday is a different story.

I think a lot of folks will be stunned by Obama's performance (not in a good way if you like Obama).

by dpANDREWS 2008-01-01 11:42AM | 0 recs
the anti-Clinton vote is real

I've knocked on doors three days out of the last four. It is amazing how many people will use the words "anyone by Hillary" (words I do not ever use myself). "Oh, you're for Edwards? We'll be there for him--anyone but Hillary!" Or: "I'm still between two, but anyone but Hillary."

The Clinton supporters have made some headway in convincing me that Hillary could win the general (depending on the GOP opponent). But when I hear so many registered Ds volunteer this phrasing, it makes be very worried for our chances if she does win the nomination.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 11:55AM | 0 recs
The media loves Obama

So I don't know why they'd cherry pick video clips or interviews, but in almost every ground game / canvas / get out the vote story I have seen or read in the last three weeks, whenever they talk to an undecided I hear the same thing .. Edwards / Clinton.

by dpANDREWS 2008-01-01 11:59AM | 0 recs
in my precinct

I've talked with a surprising number of people still deciding between Edwards and Clinton. These tend to be over 50.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 12:02PM | 0 recs
also several people who have canvassed

in small towns have told me the battle there is between Hillary and Edwards, with Obama far behind.

We will see if Obama's 40 or so field offices can help him make up the gap there.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 12:03PM | 0 recs
Re: the anti-Clinton vote is real

Iowa (and Mississippi) voters have been saying "anybody but a woman" for a very long time now.

by hwc 2008-01-01 12:05PM | 0 recs
but not Iowa DEMOCRATS

as you seem incapable of understanding.

by desmoinesdem 2008-01-01 01:25PM | 0 recs
but not Iowa DEMOCRATS

According to your local newspaper, Democrats don't vote in the Iowa Democratic caucus.

by hwc 2008-01-01 03:54PM | 0 recs
no, you don't
if you really think the "Anybody but Clinton" does , too tough, too involved in Bill's white house, not have a LOT to do with "anybody but a woman" you are seriously deluding yourself.
The very things that people think they don't like about her are based on old republican smears that are all about her being somehow inappropriate as a woman...too ambitious, too involved in her husband's white house, the lie that she only stayed married to  him to get where she wanted politically.
Yes even democrats have been infected by these memes and if you really can't stand to bring yourself to accept this idea then just look at the discrepancy in who is supporting her male and female.
by MollieBradford 2008-01-02 04:29AM | 0 recs
SteveM, why did you troll rate this?

time after time you seem to have a problem with any reference to the problem of sexism in this race. Even if you don't agree this comment doesn't deserve to be troll rated.  It was sligtly snarky, but that is hardly a crime around here.

by MollieBradford 2008-01-02 04:32AM | 0 recs

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