Post by concerned on Feb 3, 2008 20:14:04 GMT -5
THE RACE: The presidential race for Democrats, Republicans nationally (CBS News)
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THE NUMBERS - DEMOCRATS
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 41 percent
Barack Obama, 41 percent
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THE NUMBERS - REPUBLICANS
John McCain, 46 percent
Mitt Romney, 23 percent
Mike Huckabee, 12 percent
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OF INTEREST:
Obama has made significant gains among white men and black voters to pull even with Clinton; a month ago, Clinton led Obama by 15 percentage points. McCain has solidified his front-runner status since wins in South Carolina and Florida, even though Romney has gained some support from likely Republican voters.
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This CBS News poll is based on telephone interviews conducted from Jan. 30-Feb. 2 among a random national sample of 1,232 adults. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 5 percentage points for Democrats, and plus or minus 6 percentage points for Republicans and GOP-leaning independents.
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COMPLETE RESULTS: www.cbsnews.com/
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THE RACE: The presidential race for Democrats, Republicans nationally (Pew Research Center)
___
THE NUMBERS - DEMOCRATS
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 46 percent
Barack Obama, 38 percent
___
THE NUMBERS - REPUBLICANS
John McCain, 42 percent
Mitt Romney, 22 percent
Mike Huckabee, 20 percent
Ron Paul, 5 percent
___
OF INTEREST:
Although Clinton's support has not changed in recent weeks, Obama has cut her lead in half. She was 15 points ahead in mid-January, compared with 8 percentage points now. But the number of undecided Democrats also increased during the period, to 15 percent from 6 percent. McCain also has seen sharp gains since the middle of last month. He is up 13 percentage points with roughly twice the support of Romney or Huckabee.
___
This Pew Research Center for the People & the Press poll was based in telephone interviews conducted from Jan. 30-Feb. 2 among a nationwide sample of 1,502 adults. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points total and among registered voters; plus or minus 4.5 percentage points for Democrats and Democratic-leaning registered voters; and plus or minus 5 percentage points for Republicans or Republican-leaning registered voters.
___
THE NUMBERS - DEMOCRATS
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 41 percent
Barack Obama, 41 percent
___
THE NUMBERS - REPUBLICANS
John McCain, 46 percent
Mitt Romney, 23 percent
Mike Huckabee, 12 percent
___
OF INTEREST:
Obama has made significant gains among white men and black voters to pull even with Clinton; a month ago, Clinton led Obama by 15 percentage points. McCain has solidified his front-runner status since wins in South Carolina and Florida, even though Romney has gained some support from likely Republican voters.
___
This CBS News poll is based on telephone interviews conducted from Jan. 30-Feb. 2 among a random national sample of 1,232 adults. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 5 percentage points for Democrats, and plus or minus 6 percentage points for Republicans and GOP-leaning independents.
___
COMPLETE RESULTS: www.cbsnews.com/
___
THE RACE: The presidential race for Democrats, Republicans nationally (Pew Research Center)
___
THE NUMBERS - DEMOCRATS
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 46 percent
Barack Obama, 38 percent
___
THE NUMBERS - REPUBLICANS
John McCain, 42 percent
Mitt Romney, 22 percent
Mike Huckabee, 20 percent
Ron Paul, 5 percent
___
OF INTEREST:
Although Clinton's support has not changed in recent weeks, Obama has cut her lead in half. She was 15 points ahead in mid-January, compared with 8 percentage points now. But the number of undecided Democrats also increased during the period, to 15 percent from 6 percent. McCain also has seen sharp gains since the middle of last month. He is up 13 percentage points with roughly twice the support of Romney or Huckabee.
___
This Pew Research Center for the People & the Press poll was based in telephone interviews conducted from Jan. 30-Feb. 2 among a nationwide sample of 1,502 adults. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points total and among registered voters; plus or minus 4.5 percentage points for Democrats and Democratic-leaning registered voters; and plus or minus 5 percentage points for Republicans or Republican-leaning registered voters.