Out in Left Field
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Thursday, May 01, 2008
kate
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Will you be joining in on the riots promised by Recreate '68?
"-- THE RACE: The presidential race for Democrats nationally
___
THE NUMBERS - Pew Research Center
Barack Obama, 47 percent
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 45 percent
___
OF INTEREST:
Obama had a 10-percentage point lead over Clinton in March. His image among Democrats is not as strong as it was, though he's still viewed more favorably than his rival for several attributes, including being more inspiring, honest and down-to-earth. Clinton is also seen less positively now, yet she has improved her standing among working-class whites and white voters under age 50. An increased number of Democrats _ about half _ now think the lengthy Democratic race will hurt the party. Yet a Clinton race against Republican candidate John McCain and an Obama matchup with McCain are both viewed as being close. That represents little change in a Clinton-McCain race but a drop in the 12-point advantage Obama had over McCain in March."
What's really going to be interesting is to watch Hillary steal the nomination away from Obama, and the whole party destroy itself in a spasm of self-hatred and recrimination.
This is going to be fun.
Congrats!
This is for the state convention. I doubt we'll see any riots.
Unless the food sucks.
how many of the state delegates go to the "big show?"
Recreate '68 may differ with you regarding the possibility of demonstrations and riots. Can you say "dress rehearsal?"
Congratulations. I'm not on the list, but wish I was.
Democrat Hillary Clinton made gains in North Carolina yesterday, drawing within single digits of rival Barack Obama, while the two remain deadlocked in Indiana with just days before Tuesday's primary elections in those states, a pair of new Zogby daily tracking telephone polls show.
Obama leads in North Carolina by a 46% to 37% margin, with 17% either unsure or favoring someone else. In Indiana, Obama won 43% support, compared to 42% for Clinton, with the balance either favoring someone else or undecided.
The telephone surveys, conducted May 1-2, 2008, are the latest of Zogby's two-day daily tracking surveys that will continue until Tuesday. In North Carolina, 627 likely Democratic primary election voters were polled. The survey carries a margin of error of +/- 4.0 percentage points. In Indiana, 629 likely voting Democratic primary voters were surveyed. That poll also carries a margin of error of +/- 4.0 percentage points.
The telephone surveys were conducted using live operators working out of Zogby's call center in Upstate New York.
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