By request, I’ve decided to take a look at just what kind of electorate the Public Policy Polling screening of Likely Voters seems to be predicting. To do this I will use recent PPP polls from two states: California, which went for Barack Obama heavily, and West Virginia, where Obama’s popularity has never been that hot.
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Examining the PPP Likely Voter screen
By Neil Stevens on October 27, 2010
Senate Projection for October 26
By Neil Stevens on October 27, 2010
Candidates are running out of time to make moves this year. Last week the Republicans stayed just on the edge of gaining seven seats, though I thought some of that was due to some freak polls.
We’ll see now just how freaky they were.
[More]The polls have stabilized for Richard Blumenthal
By Neil Stevens on October 26, 2010
For some time there the polling in the Connecticut Senate race was rather unstable. We were seeing polls with huge swings apart from each other every few days. I really had no clear path for evaluating it than to average the two and give Democrat Richard Blumenthal a medium lead over Republican Linda McMahon.
But including the new Rasmussen we’ve now seen four good polls in a row for Blumenthal. The race appears to be settling.
[More]House Projection for October 25
By Neil Stevens on October 25, 2010
Good evening. We’re getting so very close to the end here, I may start running these more than once a week to see where they go. It depends on the interest level I see in that.
Last week it was Bloomberg filling in for Newsweek as the odd poll out, but now the original thing is here: Newsweek is back. We’ll see how far down it drags the overall average Republican gain.
[More]Maryland bucks the national trend
By Neil Stevens on October 25, 2010
Even though the West Virginia Senate race showed that sometimes a national trend can overcome local candidates, the candidates still matter.
The race for Governor in Maryland has turned out to be one of those. For some time the race was close, but while my back was turned it seems that Democrat Martin O’Malley is simply running away from Republican Robert Ehrlich.
[More]Two kinds of polling in California
By Neil Stevens on October 25, 2010
As always I give the note that any analysis I do of the California Senate race carries an unusual risk of bias because I live here and I have a strong emotional attachment to the outcome.
That said, I’m beginning to notice a pattern in the polling between Democrat Barbara Boxer and Republican Carly Fiorina that suggests serious, late-breaking movement in favor of the Republican. I see it in the way the polls are moving with their methodologies.
[More]We’ll know early if the polls are all wrong
By Neil Stevens on October 22, 2010
Quick hit to close the weekend: If the Florida Governor’s race isn’t close, as this new Sunshine State News/VSS poll shows in a 45-45 tie, then we’ll know the polls this year were out of calibration.
In particular, if Republican Rick Scott wins handily over Democrat Alex Sink, then the Democrats may have a long night.
SD-AL and my dignity at risk
By Neil Stevens on October 22, 2010
I once said that Democrat Stephanie Herseth Sandlin was done. Finished. Had no chance of winning the South Dakota at-large House seat. Was pining for the fjords. Hers was a dead candidacy. She then promptly tied up the race in the polling.
I already have enough egg on my face that I’m genuinely hoping polls like this one hold up, with Republican Kristi Noem ahead, so I can escape without complete embarrassment.
[More]Sestak closing, says Quinnipiac
By Neil Stevens on October 21, 2010
The last time Quinnipiac Uniersity covered the Pennsylvania Senate race, the result was right in the middle of the pack, and inline with every poll from mid-July to early October: a seven point lead for Republican Pat Toomey over Democrat Joe Sestak.
But now, just as PPP came out with its shocking Sestak lead, Q says the race is close.
[More]On the polling by The Conservative Journal
By Neil Stevens on October 21, 2010
A website called The Conservative Journal is releasing polls now, with an archive available on the website.
The polls are definitely making the rounds on the right, thanks to results that are relatively good for Republicans. But are they worth the pixels they’re printed on? It’s hard to say.
[More]Flipping coins on the west coast
By Neil Stevens on October 20, 2010
I’m adding a fifth seat to my four close Senate battleground seats. I’d previously listed West Virginia, Washington, Illinois, and Nevada as the key battleground for the Senate as we approach election day, but it’s increasingly difficult for me to see a difference between Washington and California.
So, the race between Democrat Barbara Boxer and Republican Carly Fiorina joins the list.
[More]Senate Projection for October 19
By Neil Stevens on October 19, 2010
And it’s already time for the second installment of the new Tuesday version of my Senate projection. Republicans fell back a little after making new highs last week, but I can think of a few seats where Republicans might bounce back from that.
Then again, I can think of a race or two where the Democrats could regain more ground, so we shall see.
[More]An outlier, or a tight Pennsylvania?
By Neil Stevens on October 19, 2010
Republican Pat Toomey has been rather comfortable in the Pennsylvania Senate polling. He hit double digits in the last Rasmussen poll a week ago, and Democrat Joe Sestak hasn’t led a poll since one weird outlier in the middle of May.
For PPP to show Sestak up today is definitely surprising, and noteworthy, but it’s possible this is an outlier.
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