Category Archives: Polls

Not even in the same ball park

Remember yesterday’s “dorky poll” that I showed was badly skewed?

August 2, 2012: Pew “If the election were today” poll of Registered Voters

Obama 51% vs. Romney 41% vs. Not Reported 8%

http://www.people-press.org/2012/08/02/romneys-personal-image-remains-negative/

Compare it with this one.

Friday, August 3, 2012: Rasmussen “If the election were today” poll of Likely Voters

Romney 47% vs. Obama 43% vs. Other 5% vs. Undecided 5%

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_administration/daily_presidential_tracking_poll

These polls both have MOEs in the 3-4 point range. Let’s just suppose both are off by the maximum.

Pew: Obama + 10 becomes Obama +6

Rasmussen: Romney +4 becomes Tied.

They’re not even in the same ballpark. Obviously, I think Rasmussen is closer to the truth.

If you like this, you might also enjoy https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/08/03/another-dorky-poll/

Comments Off on Not even in the same ball park

Filed under Barack Obama, Elections, Mitt Romney, Polls

Another dorky poll

August 2, 2012: Pew Poll gives Obama 51% vs. Romney 41% in “If election were today” question

BUT is Obama really ten points ahead?

Party Affiliation in Pew Sample vs. Gallup Party Affiliation Poll July 19-22, 2012 (most recent) = Skew

Republican 459 = 24.5% vs. 28% = minus 3.5 points

Independent 599 = 32% vs. 41% = minus 9 points

Democrat 813 = 43.5% vs. 30% = plus 13.5 points

Total 1871 = 100% showing 17 point skew toward Democrat over Republican

Calculating the Independent skew – With “Leaners”, Gallup reports Republican 47% vs. Democrat 45%

Republican 47% – 28% = 19 points from Independents = 43%

Democrat 45% – 30% = 15 points from Independents = 34%

Independent 41% – 31 points = 10 Independents with no Lean = 23%

Rough split of the minus 9 points worth of Independents between Republican, Democrat and No Lean:

Republican 4 vs. Democrat 2 vs. None 2

Assuming I’ve done the math right (not a good assumption, I assure you!), this adds another 2 points to the skew toward Democrat over Republican, for a whopping total of 19. That’s nearly double the lead they’re showing for Obama over Romney.

So, yeah, Obama’s ahead if you mostly only ask Obama voters who they’ll vote for. Duh.

Sources @

http://www.people-press.org/2012/08/02/romneys-personal-image-remains-negative/

http://www.gallup.com/poll/15370/Party-Affiliation.aspx

H/t to GP for heads up on this one.

If you enjoyed this, you might also like https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/07/02/some-good-news-for-our-side/

1 Comment

Filed under Barack Obama, Democrats, Elections, Mitt Romney, Polls, Republicans

Numbers not good for Obama Democrats

I think the following poll numbers make it crystal clear that all we need to do is identify what a voter’s hot button issues are and show him or her the relevant facts.

GENERAL

Rasmussen national polls of Likely Voters

July 1, 2012: Is the country better off today than it was four years ago?

   Yes 30% vs. No 60% vs. Not sure 10%

July 6, 2012: How would you rate Obama’s handling of economic issues?

Good 31% vs. Poor 48% vs. Not sure 21%

Check out the “squeamish about racism” factor in the two questions above. The Yes/Good group is virtually identical. But when the question mentions Obama personally, 11% of the No voters jump into the Not Sure category.

June 11, 2012: The next president will likely be …

Democrat 25% vs. Republican 60% vs. Not sure 15%

When Obama first took office, 44% thought a Republican would replace him.

UNION

Gallup poll of Registered Voters

June 11, 2012: If the election was today, who would you vote for:

Union members: Obama 57% vs. Romney 35%

2008 Election

   Union members: Obama 59% vs. McCain 39%

Currently, only about 12% of employed voters are union members. In 2008, 21% of voters reported coming from union households.

BLACKS

Public Policy Polling surveys of Blacks in North Carolina

If the election were today, who would you vote for?

May 2012: Obama 87% vs. Romney 11% vs. 2% Undecided

June 2012: Obama 76% vs. Romney 20% vs. 4% Undecided

Election 2008: About 13% of voters were Black. 95% of them voted for Obama.

JEWS

Siena College polls of New York Jews

May 2012: Obama Support 62% vs. Oppose 32%

June 2012: Obama Support 51% vs. Oppose 43%

June 2012: America is on the right track 31% vs. headed in the wrong direction 62%

OBAMA’S IDEOLOGICAL BASE

Rasmussen poll of Adult Americans

July 5, 2012: Are you proud of America?

No 7% vs. Yes 84% vs. Meh 9%

————-

Sources:

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/06/12/Obama-losing-black-jewish-support

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/june_2012/30_say_america_better_off_today_than_four_years_ago

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/obama_administration/june_2012/31_give_obama_positive_marks_on_handling_economic_issues

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/mood_of_america/partisan_politics

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/lifestyle/holidays/july_2012/84_are_proud_to_be_americans

http://www.businessinsider.com/barack-obama-african-american-vote-black-north-carolina-2012-6

http://www.gallup.com/poll/155138/Majority-Union-Members-Favor-Obama-Third-Back-Romney.aspx

http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/obamas-jewish-support-drops-22-points-new-york_647153.html

http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/elections/how_groups_voted/voted_08.html#.T_na0JFSQwA

2 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Democrats, Mitt Romney, Polls, Unions

Obama’s “Betting on America” tour

Obama spent July 5 and 6 tooling around Ohio in his Canadian-made bus telling everyone how Very Committed He Is to Economic Growth and Job Creation for Americans.

Click on graphic to embiggen.

Ohio is an important swing state. Obama won it in 2008 by 4%. A recent Quinnipiac poll claimed he is ahead of Romney 47% to 38% among Registered Voters in Ohio. But I compared the poll samples with Gallup’s Party Affiliation poll and found a significant skew.

                        Quin    Gallup

Democrat        34%     30%

Republican     26%     30%

Independent    34%    39%

Meh                     6%        1%

I also found a somewhat older, but specific-to-Ohio poll at Gallup that, with leaners, showed Ohio at:

Democrat 42.5% vs. Republican 41.2% vs. 16.3% Neither.

I looks to me like Quinnipiac gave Democrats a totally unrealistic 8 point advantage! No WAY is Obama leading Romney by nine points. Sheesh.

Look what happens when Quinnipiac’s results are adjusted to line up with Gallup’s numbers.

Q. Vote for Obama   47% – 4% = 43%

Gallup: Ohio Democrat                 42.5%

Q. Vote for Romney   38% + 4% = 42%

Gallup:  Ohio Republican               41.2%

Q. Other, Undecided, Wouldn’t Vote   15%

Gallup Ohio Neither Party Preference 16.3%

Isn’t it interesting how closely the adjusted numbers match Gallup’s 2011 numbers?

Now check out what Rasmussen found when they polled Likely Voters in Ohio recently.

                 April    May

Obama   46%     44%

Romney  42%    46%

Neither    12%    10%

People know Obama. I can’t help thinking that anyone who is likely to vote for him is already committed to him and that the more we get to see of Romney, the more we’ll see of the same kind of shift away from Obama/Neither and toward Romney.

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/05/12/check-it-out-2/

Sources:

http://mindfulwebworks.com/radical/obama-bus-tour-didnt-gamble-on-american-made

http://whitehouse.blogs.cnn.com/2012/07/05/obamas-betting-on-america-campaign-bus-tour/

http://www.quinnipiac.edu/institutes-and-centers/polling-institute/presidential-swing-states-%28fl-oh-and-pa%29/release-detail?ReleaseID=1767

http://www.gallup.com/poll/15370/Party-Affiliation.aspx

http://www.gallup.com/poll/125066/State-States.aspx

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/elections/election_2012/election_2012_presidential_election/ohio/election_2012_ohio_president

2 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Polls

Some good news for our side

I just finished scoping out four opinion polls about the HHS mandate that date from February, March, May and June of this year. For those who want it, the data and URLs are provided below. But first, here are my thoughts.

A May poll of Adult Americans showed a very high degree of passion and support for freedom of religion above all else. It’s very rare to get a ZERO in the Meh crowd. [Meh = Don’t Know, No Opinion, It Depends.] But that’s what this poll found when they asked,

“Should freedom of religion be protected, even if it conflicts with other laws?”

26% No vs. 74% Yes vs. 0% Meh.

Clearly, as a nation, we really care about religious freedom. I have seen this 1:3 split in other polls on hot issues, including in another question from that same May poll.

“Is it morally wrong to force health care workers and doctors to provide abortion when they object for religious reasons?”

27% No vs. 72% Yes vs. 1% Meh.

I believe the 1:3 reflects the Hard-Left vs. Center-Right divide in America today. The Democrat Media Complex blats about how they are the majority and we are the extremist fringey tinfoil hatters. But the real truth is the opposite.

This is something to keep in mind when talking to those critical Undecided voters. The Hard-Leftists are already committed to the Democrats, so the likelihood that an Undecided is fundamentally Center-Right on most issues is very, very high. Find their hot buttons and focus on how Obama Democrats have violated those core values.

I saw another phenomenon in the May poll that I’ve seen before. Despite 74% of these same people saying they supported freedom of religion above all else, when the questions got specific about birth control, abortion, etc., support for the primacy of religious freedom dropped to between 51% and 58%.

But it shouldn’t have mattered whether the question was “Does religious freedom trump everything?” or “Does religious freedom trump this, that or the other thing?” Everything should mean everything, right? Except apparently it didn’t for about one-third of the people who said it did.

I see the same disconnect in presidential approval polls. When the question is “Do you approve of the job Obama is doing?”, the numbers are always higher than they are for subordinate issues, like “Do you approve of the job Obama is doing on the economy?” or “the war in Afghanistan?” etc.

The best explanation I can come up with is that people weenie out on reporting their real opinions when there is a hot button issue in the question. The Democrat Media Complex hounds us with certain messages about what it means to be a “good” person. Like, “If you don’t like Barack Obama, you’re a dirty RAAAAACIST!!!” And “If you don’t support birth control, you HATE WOMEN!!!” So the poll questions that include a culturally-charged anxiety trigger get a less honest answer than one that homes in on a core value.

It could be the other way around. I.e., that these people are all for religious freedom as long as it doesn’t interfere with them getting free stuff. I hope not. Freedom of religion is the reason many of us (or our ancestors) left everything familiar to come here. I think we’re more attached to it than the Left realizes.

If I’m right, then the higher number in the straight-up “religious freedom is primary” question is the accurate number while the lower numbers that are attached to culturally-charged anxiety triggers are less accurate. I guess we’ll find out in November when voters are not answering a live pollster … “What will she think of me?!” … but casting secret ballots that will help decide the fate of the nation.

The March poll provides support for my thesis. It asked twice about forcing health insurance plans to provide free birth control, once for just anybody and then again for groups that have moral or religious objections to birth control. Where the question was purely secular, opposition to mandatory free birth control was 51%. But when they mentioned religious or moral objections in the question, opposition increased by 6 points. And notice in the June poll that the HHS mandate issue ALONE has resulted in a 13% to 16% shift toward opposition to Obama!

I think the lesson for us is clear.

When we’re talking with those critical Undecideds who will swing this close race for or against us, we should couch the discussions in terms of CORE values.

“It’s not about birth control. It’s about keeping the government from forcing people to violate their religious beliefs.”

“This is not about race. We elected a black man to our highest office. We’ve proven we aren’t a racist nation anymore. Now we need to ask if he has fixed the economy and gotten people back to work like he said he would.”

One final point … I’m interested in how well our messaging is getting past the alphabet media blockade, so I snooped through the data to see if I could see any signs that there’s been a shift in opinion over the five months these polls tracked. I think there has been and it’s to our side.

Three polls asked variations on the generic question: Should health insurance plans be required to provide free birth control? The February poll showed 43% of Likely Voters opposed, but the March and May polls both showed 51% of Adult Americans opposed. Since Likely Voters generally poll more Center-Right than Adult Americans, the actual shift toward support for religious freedom may have been even higher than 8%. And it’s held up against the Left’s onslaughts.

Thank God for the First Amendment, talk radio, the internet and our church pulpits!

A Survey of recent opinion polls re: The HHS Mandate

February 2012 (Likely Voters)

Should health insurance companies be required by law to provide free …

… Contraception: 43% No.

… Morning after pills: 50% No.

March 2012 (Adult Americans)

Should health insurance plans for all employees have to cover the full cost of birth control for female employees or should employers be able to opt out for moral or religious reasons?

Plans offered by secular institutions: 40% Must cover vs. 51% Opt out vs. 9% Meh.

Plans offered by religious institutions: 36% Must cover vs. 57% Opt out vs. 7% Meh.

CtH: The second “Opt out” is 6% higher and the Meh is 2% lower. Another sign that we have a special place in our hearts for protecting religious freedom.

May 2012 (Adult Americans)

Should freedom of religion be protected, even if it conflicts with other laws?

Adults: 74% Yes vs. 26% No vs. 0% Meh.

Is it morally wrong to force health care workers and doctors to provide abortion when they object for religious reasons?

Adults: 72% Yes vs. 27% No vs. 1% Meh.

Should individual health care providers and organizations providing health insurance policies be allowed to opt out of providing …

Abortion: 58% Yes vs. 38% No vs. 4% Meh

Birth control pills: 51% Yes vs. 46% No vs. 3% Meh

Abortion-inducing drugs: 51% Yes vs. 44% No vs. 5% Meh

Medication to speed the death of a terminally ill patient: 55% Yes vs. 41% No vs. 4% Meh

In vitro fertilization treatments that could result in the death of an embryo: 52% Yes vs. 41% No vs. 7% Meh

Do you believe …

… Contraception is morally acceptable? 88% Yes.

… Abortion is wrong in an of itself? 58% Yes.

June 2012 (Registered Voters)

Is providing free birth control worthy of federal concern?

Catholics: 57% No vs. 37% Yes.

Women: 44% No vs. 51% Yes.

Does the federal government have the right to force morally objectionable coverage on religious institutions?

Women: 57% No.

Should birth control be treated like any other drug, without mandatory coverage?

Catholics: 67% Yes. Women 63% Yes.

Will the HHS mandate make you less likely to vote for Obama, more likely to vote for Obama, or have no impact on your vote?

Religiously active white females: 38% Less Likely vs. 12% More Likely. (38 – 12 = 16 away from Obama)

Catholics: 29% Less Likely vs. 13% More Likely. (29 – 13 = 16 away from Obama)

Independents: 28% Less Likely vs. 15% More Likely. (28 – 15 = 13 away from Obama)

Sources

February poll of Likely Voters by Rasmussen reported @

http://www.lifenews.com/2012/02/22/poll-americans-oppose-obama-birth-control-coverage-mandate/

March poll of Adult Americans by New York Times/CBS News reported @

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/03/13/us/politics/president-obamas-approval-rating-drops.html?ref=politics

May poll of Adult Americans by Marist College commissioned by the Knights of Columbus reported @

http://www.lifenews.com/2012/05/22/poll-majority-of-americans-oppose-obama-hhs-mandate/

June poll of Registered Voters by QEV Analytics commissioned by The Catholic Association reported @

http://www.lifenews.com/2012/06/19/new-poll-hhs-mandate-hurts-obama-with-women-catholics/

2 Comments

Filed under Abortion, Barack Obama, Democrats, Economy, Elections, First Amendment, HHS, Law, Media Bias, Obamacare, Polls, Race Relations, Religious Liberty, Unemployment

Good news in Ohio

Click on graphics to embiggen.

In 2012, Ohio will be worth 18 electoral votes.

In 1980, Reagan won Ohio by 10.6%.

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2988612730056011884NqFYSn

In 2008, Obama won Ohio by 4.58%.

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2558846880056011884CCsvWv

Support for Romney has shown a slow, but steady increase.

Nov 2011: Obama 50% vs Romney 41%

Jan 2012: Obama 49% vs Romney 42%

May 2012: Obama 50% vs Romney 43%

Jun 2012: Obama 47% vs Romney 44%

Meanwhile, Obama’s approval numbers took a big hit in the past month.

May 2012: Obama Approval 48% vs Disapproval 48%

Jun 2012: Obama Approval 44% vs Disapproval 51%

His support among his own base dropped 5%.

May 2012: Obama Democrats 88%

Jun 2012: Obama Democrats 83%

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2659871640056011884sZssld

Sources:

http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/05/obama-up-7-in-ohio.html

http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2011/PPP_Release_OH_062612.pdf

http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/national.php?year=1980

http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/national.php?year=2008

Comments Off on Good news in Ohio

Filed under Barack Obama, Democrats, Elections, Mitt Romney, Polls, Republicans, Ronald Reagan

The pendulum is swinging

Campus Pro-Lifers are doing a heckuva good job fighting the Leftist Elite’s Culture of Death messaging.

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2233632930056011884zZcoeJ

Click on graphic to embiggen.

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/04/01/church-goers-are-significantly-happier/

Source: http://www.gallup.com/poll/154946/Non-Christians-Postgrads-Highly-Pro-Choice.aspx

Comments Off on The pendulum is swinging

Filed under Abortion, Polls

You can keep your doctor unless he quits

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2325841200056011884OdtTnv

Click on graphic to embiggen.

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/05/05/taxed-enough-already-just-wait-until-ocare-kicks-in/

Source: http://www.dpmafoundation.org/physician-attitudes-on-medicine.html

6 Comments

Filed under Medicare/Medicaid, Obamacare, Polls

Small businesses struggling to stay afloat

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2272252070056011884ClKcHk

Click on graphic to embiggen.

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/06/03/recovering-from-recession/

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/47723383

4 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Polls

The Race Card passed its expiry date a long time ago

Click on graphics to embiggen.

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2004664260056011884bZtPsn

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2670106600056011884VlTvYb

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2654868530056011884bjVnBd

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/04/10/the-hypocrisy-of-progressives-of-pallor/

1 Comment

Filed under Barack Obama, Immigration, John McCain, Mitt Romney, Obamacare, Polls, Race Relations