Question:
Are Yahoo Conservatives comfortable with their candidate chances considering the national polls?
2008-10-29 10:50:46 UTC
Go Obama!
27 answers:
2008-10-29 10:53:57 UTC
OBAMA is going to ROCK OUR WORLD. He is awesome
Ann
2008-10-29 10:56:18 UTC
I do not believe the national polls at all. The media has been unfair and pushing Obama to win from the beginning. It has been very unfair.

Look at the polls before Regan was elected, when John Kerry lost - he was "ahead" supposedly as well. So YES, I am feeling pretty good with McCain.
Wall Space
2008-10-29 10:55:58 UTC
Yes, I am quite comfortable. With polls, you have to look at the inside numbers. Gallup is a good example. The overall polled group has Obama up by 9, but among likely voters he only up by 2. Another good poll, the IBD TIPP poll, has Obama up by 3, which is within the margin of error. So overall, I think if these trends continue--moving toward McCain, then McCain will win.



Also, just look at John Kerry!
msmanners212
2008-10-29 10:55:37 UTC
Well since many of the national polls are conducted by the same "news" organizations who have circle j**ked for Obama for the past two years...I can't say that they have much credence as far as being unbiased.



and I think that the polls in the past 3 elections have been wrong.
2008-10-29 11:00:09 UTC
Seeing as the only two REAL Conservatives left in the race - Bob Barr and Chuck Baldwin - only have 1% and >1%, respectively, of the vote; no. It appears that yet again the American people will have to settle for another Liberal President. I guess over the last 16 years they have gotten used to it.
2008-10-29 10:55:54 UTC
Ha Ha....There is no Conservative candidate running. Obama is the closest thing to a conservative.



Look up Barry Goldwater, that was a conservative.



Ron Paul, thats another conservative.
skipfab74
2008-10-29 10:56:34 UTC
I'm comfortable that McCain is closing the lead Obama had.
robert p
2008-10-29 16:16:13 UTC
The conservatives don't have a candidate.

Neither candidate is a true conservative.
2008-10-29 10:59:26 UTC
Yea, Obama better throw in the towel right now. BTW did Obama's grandmother kick the bucket yet? I guess Michelle was too racist to go with Barack.
2008-10-29 10:55:41 UTC
I think Obama should win just so the brainwashed liberals see the damage he will do and learn from it for good.



Like Churchill said, If you are not a liberal at 20, you have no heart



If you are not a conservative at 30, you have no brain.
smellyfoot ™
2008-10-29 10:54:46 UTC
Conservatives don't have a candidate. Republicans, on the other hand, have John McCain. National polls are just that - polls. Everyone has a chance until the voting booths close. Until then, don't call it....you will look like an idiot (like the newspapers did when they printed "Dewey Defeats Truman!")
Splitters
2008-10-29 10:53:48 UTC
What I'm not comfortable with is the biased national polls.
tabbi8407
2008-10-29 10:55:38 UTC
look at state polls more than national polls, if you ever look at silly polls.





those guys KEEP calling my mother, trying to poll her, and she keeps telling them "I'm NOT a US citizen, please stop calling, I can not vote". Every election, ROFL, and they never learn.
Blue Haired Old Lady
2008-10-29 10:54:23 UTC
Polls really don't mean anything. We do have to wait until all the votes are counted. Poll results depend on who they poll.



Go Obama!!!
2008-10-29 10:55:47 UTC
Gallop shows a 2% gap, a statistical tie.



McCain will win!



We need McCain.



0bama will ruin our country with his Black Separatist beliefs and Socialist and Terrorist ties.
2008-10-29 10:57:01 UTC
polls are for idiots. Anyone who lets a poll influence their vote is such a huge idiot they probably shouldn't be voting.
Rene
2008-10-29 10:55:06 UTC
Polls are inaccurate. If they were accurate, we'd have Kerry right now as President!
gcnengineer
2008-10-29 10:54:25 UTC
Gallup has Obama up by 2 points,....yeah I'm confortable with that,.....no democrat has been elected with that small of lead
You're Kidding... Right?
2008-10-29 10:54:09 UTC
Polls have never decided an election.
Shadow Knight
2008-10-29 10:55:23 UTC
Yes they feel he has a chance.
ROBERT S
2008-10-29 10:54:07 UTC
I have never been polled, my neighbors have not nor have any of my business acquaintances. So who are the polls?
I'm always right.
2008-10-29 10:53:41 UTC
You mean the +2 or +3 polls showing McCain closing in on the election? Please read the news before posting.
blockbreaker
2008-10-29 10:53:56 UTC
typical ignorant kid.You think poll=election.Classic reason the voting age should go to 30
oldmarine08
2008-10-29 10:53:27 UTC
Polls are most always worng...case in point...Reagan!
2008-10-29 10:55:18 UTC
Hell yes.
2008-10-29 10:53:26 UTC
Survey Says: Polls Have Problems

http://www.livescience.com/culture/080928-political-polls.html

By Jeanna Bryner, Senior Writer

posted: 29 September 2008 09:51 am ET



Election polls showing John McCain ahead one day, Barack Obama the next, then some neck-and-neck results the next day, are seriously flawed, according to one pollster. Another pollster begs to differ, saying polls provide valuable information about public opinion on candidates and about which issues are pushing the electorate.



"Right now polls don't tell the truth about the electorate and they don’t tell the truth about the American public," said David Moore, founder of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center and former managing editor of the Gallup Poll.



Moore's main issue involves the wording of a standard poll question, which asks who a person would vote for if elections were held today. Rather than giving voters a chance to report mixed feelings or just not knowing, polls tend to "force" a definitive answer, said Moore, author of "The Opinion Makers: An Insider Exposes the Truth Behind the Polls" (Beacon Press, 2008).



Other shortcomings include the lack of cell-phone users polled as well as the natural variability that occurs in voter opinions months before the election.



To some, however, rejecting all polls seems a little extreme. "I think that's vastly overblown if it's an attempt to discredit virtually all polling because of this issue," said Charles Franklin, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. "It rests on a fundamentally correct fact. Absolutely the way you word questions affects the answers that you get. But for anyone to claim there's one right way to ask the question and every other way is flawed, I think is a vast overreach."



In the end, polls can be analyzed after the fact. The truth: Polls done months before an election don't turn out to have been very predictive of real outcomes.



Track record



Though polls have occasionally failed to predict who will win an election, most notably in the 2008 Democratic primary in New Hampshire in which Hillary Clinton won, the polling track record is "very good," according to the Pew Research Center.



This is particularly true for polls taken close to an election. For example, in 2004 the average of several major national polls from the days leading up to the presidential election showed President Bush with a 1.6 percentage point advantage over Sen. John Kerry. Bush ended up winning the election by 2.4 percentage points.



Election polls taken early in a race, during the first quarter of the year prior to the presidential election, have shown a poor track record in predicting the winner, according to a review of polls between 1959 and 2003 by the Pew Research Center.



"Polls conducted early in an election season should be taken as snapshots in time, and obviously cannot capture the impact of the campaign and its events to come," according to Pew analysts.



For instance, a Pew analysis of polling done early in campaigns found that in February 1995, several early readings showed Sen. Bob Dole leading President Clinton by as many as 6 percentage points. Then, 21 months later, Clinton won by 8 percentage points.



"If you take all previous presidential elections, the polls vary a lot over time and they all end up basically where the election results are," said Gary King, a political scientist at Harvard University.



So as the election gets closer the polls all tend to narrow down and point to the right candidate.



"By the time you get to the night before the election that's pretty much what the election results are going to be," he said, adding that political scientists are pretty accurate at forecasting the election outcome at the time of the conventions.



As for why the polls are so variable and possibly inaccurate months and months before the elections, King said, it's "natural variability" in part. "People don't really know who the candidates are yet. There's no reason for them to decide who they're really going to vote for months before the election. They only really have to know by November," King said during a telephone interview.



Missing cell-phone users



Natural variability is just part of the problem. Many Americans are ditching their landlines for cell phones, a trend that can wreak havoc on election polls.



While some polls are starting to include cell-phone users, others aren't.



Surveys conducted by Pew in June, July and September showed that including cell-phone interviews led to results showing more support for Obama and slightly less for McCain.



For instance, the September poll involved more than 2,500 registered voters including nearly 550 individuals reached by cell phone. The combined phone-type results showed 46 percent backed Obama and 44 percent backed McCain. Among just the landline respondents, candidates were tied each with 45 percent support.



The difference between cell-only and landline individuals is age, with the cell-only sample being younger than 30, Pew analysts suggest. Young people as a group, according to Pew, have consistently backed Obama this year.



King sees the cell-phone issue as a big problem.



"There's real reason to worry about that because of the rise in cell phones and non-response," King said, referring to the ability of the polls to predict the public sentiment on the day of polling.



In addition to cell-only individuals, the pollsters don't grab a real random sample of the American public, King said.



"Nine out of ten people that pollsters call don't answer the phone or they can't reach the person," King said. The people who are home and do decide to answer the polling call, he said, are probably not representative of the people who will vote on Election Day.



Who would you vote for today?



Moore calls for polling reforms, including measuring and reporting the percentage of undecided voters, and recognizing bias in question wording and other question features.



Other political scientists disagree about the forced-question issue.



Franklin said research has shown this "forced" type question doesn't skew the results.



"If you predict the answer to that question by your political ideology, your partisanship, how you feel abut the environment, your age, education, the usual suspects, you get the same structure for people who were pushed to give an answer as for people who were not," Franklin told LiveScience.



"If there was a serious flaw to asking the question with this push for how do you lean, then we ought to see polls consistently missing the right answer of the outcome," Franklin said. "We don't see that."



He added that individual polls can be off the mark, but on average, they get it right.



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Americans Flunk Simple 3-Question Political Survey

http://www.livescience.com/culture/081015-political-news.html



20/20 Some People Shouldn't Vote:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvl0lqhCVio





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20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 1:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Phs6CwnutoY



20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 2:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e11-_cE63Us



20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 3:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuL8teeuJD8



20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 4:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Pu6cT6ICQQ



20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 5:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTI9r4pUYh4



20/20 - Politically Incorrect Guide To Politics - part 6:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWVLr8Y18e0



* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



Why does the Left keep saying that Bush is the 'cause' of the bad economy when it was the Dem Controlled Congress that screwed the pooch?



George Bush has been in office for 7 1/2 years. The first six the economy was fine.

A little over one year ago:

Consumer confidence stood at a 2 1/2 year high;

Regular gasoline sold for $2.19 a gallon;

the unemployment rate was 4.5%.

the DOW JONES hit a record high--14,000 +

American's were buying new cars, taking cruises, vacations o'seas, living large!...



But Americans wanted 'CHANGE'! So, in 2006 they voted in a Democratic Congress & yep--we got 'CHANGE' all right!.....

Consumer confidence has plummeted ;

Gasoline is now over $4 a gallon & climbing!;

Unemployment is up 5% (A 10% increase);

Americans have seen their home equity drop by $12 TRILLION DOLLARS & prices still dropping;

1% of American homes are in foreclosure.

as I write, THE DOW is probing another low - 11,300--$2.5 TRILLION DOLLARS HAS EVAPORATED FROM THEIR STOCKS, BONDS & MUTUAL FUNDS INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS!





YEP , IN 2006 AMERICA VOTED FOR CHANGE!...AND WE SURE AS HELL GOT IT!!!....NOW the DEM'S CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT--AND THE POLLS SAY HE'S GONNA BE 'THE MAN'--CLAIMS HE'S GONNA REALLY GIVE US CHANGE!!....JUST HOW MUCH MORE 'CHANGE' DO YA THINK YOU CAN STAND???.....



Put blame where blame is due. US Congress You voted the Dems in, now you get what you voted for.







DON’T MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE AS YOU MADE IN 2006!
10 week aborted fetus
2008-10-29 10:55:13 UTC
dont make me vomit


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