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May 1–3, 2008 Hillary Clinton 46% John McCain: 49%: 803 LV ±5% Barack Obama 47% John McCain: 48%: CBS News/New York Times [339] May 1–3, 2008 Hillary Clinton: 53%: John McCain 41% 601 RV Not reported Barack Obama: 51%: John McCain 40% Diageo/The Hotline/Financial Dynamics [340] April 30 – May 3, 2008 Hillary Clinton: 46%: John McCain 43% ...
This article provides line graphs and bar charts of scientific, nationwide public opinion polls that have been conducted relating to the 2008 United States presidential election. All graph data is taken from Nationwide opinion polling for the United States presidential election, 2008 and Statewide opinion polling for the United States ...
Poll Source Date administered (2008) Barack Obama John McCain Margin Sample size ... ±3.5% Poll Position/InsiderAdvantage [254] October 13 48%: 44% 4 612 LV
Animated results compare county-level returns to the 2008 gubernatorial race. 5/12 Make Your Own Election Map. ... 3/12 Pollster Charts. Embeddable, customizable ...
The company performed well, producing accurate predictions in states ranging from South Carolina to Wisconsin, many of which featured inaccurate results by other pollsters. [ 9 ] [ non-primary source needed ] [ 10 ] After the November election, PPP was ranked by the Wall Street Journal as one of the two most accurate firms, among those who were ...
±3% Feb. 6–7, 2008 41% 42% – 17% CNN/Opinion Research* [46] 500 ±4.5% Feb. 1–3, 2008 46% 49% – Gallup* [47] 1,239 ±3.0% Feb. 1–3, 2008 47%: 43% 4% [c] 6% Rasmussen Reports* [48] 900 ±4% Jan. 31 – Feb. 3, 2008 46%: 40% – CBS News/New York Times* [49] 491 ±3.0% Jan. 31 – Feb. 2, 2008 41%: 41% – 14% Cook Political Report/RT ...
Bernie Porn has decades of experience in political polling, launching local pollster EPIC-MRA in 1992. He says nothing is more important than obtaining an accurate sample. He says nothing is more ...
[1] [2] Gallup polling has often been accurate in predicting the outcome of presidential elections and the margin of victory for the winner. [3] However, it missed some close elections: 1948, 1976 and 2004, the popular vote in 2000, and the likely-voter numbers in 2012. [3]