Obama opens Biggest Lead over McCain
WASHINGTON (By Mark Murray, NBC)
October 22, 2008 ― With
voters’ increased confidence in his
ability to serve as commander in chief,
as well as a majority who now believe he
would do a good job as president, Barack
Obama has opened up his biggest
advantage over John McCain in the latest
NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
With two weeks to go until Election Day,
Obama now leads his Republican rival by
10 points among registered voters, 52 to
42 percent, up from 49 to 43 percent two
weeks ago.
Obama’s current lead is also fueled by
his strength among independent voters
(topping McCain 49 to 37 percent),
suburban voters (53 to 41), Catholics
(50 to 44) and white women (49 to 45).
In early September, after the Republican
National Convention, McCain was ahead
with independents and Catholics, and
narrowly trailed Obama among suburban
voters.
“To me, the voters have reached a
comfort level with Barack Obama,” says
Democratic pollster Peter D. Hart, who
conducted the survey with Republican
pollster Neil Newhouse. “The doubts and
question marks have been erased.”
Newhouse adds, “Obama’s beginning to
meet a threshold of acceptance among
voters.”
Palin’s drag on the ticket?
That doesn’t appear to be the case with
McCain’s running mate, Sarah Palin.
Fifty-five percent of respondents say
she’s not qualified to serve as
president if the need arises, up five
points from the previous poll.
In addition, for the first time, more
voters have a negative opinion of her
than a positive one. In the survey, 47
percent view her negatively, versus 38
percent who see her in a positive light.
That’s a striking shift since McCain
chose Palin as his running mate in early
September, when she held a 47 to 27
percent positive rating.
Now, Palin’s qualifications to be
president rank as voters’ top concern
about McCain’s candidacy - ahead of
continuing President Bush’s policies,
enacting economic policies that only
benefit the rich and keeping too high of
a troop presence in Iraq.
Hart argues that voters have turned
against Palin. The negative opinions of
her have “reflected badly on McCain and
essentially hurt the ticket
dramatically.”
Obama’s strengthened standing
The poll — conducted of 1,159 registered
voters from Oct. 17 to 20, and with an
overall margin of error of plus-minus
2.9 percentage points — comes after the
presidential debates and in the midst of
Colin Powell’s public endorsement of
Obama on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Those events appear to have strengthened
Obama’s standing with voters.
Forty-eight percent say they have
confidence in Obama serving as commander
in chief, which is nearly identical to
the 50 percent who said the same of
McCain.
A month ago, however, just 42 percent
said they were confident in Obama’s
commander in chief abilities, compared
with 53 percent for McCain.
Moreover, 56 percent say they are either
“optimistic or confident” or “satisfied
and hopeful” that Obama would do a good
job as president. Only 44 percent say
that of McCain.
And now 55 percent believe that Obama
shares their background and values,
which isn’t far off from the 57 percent
who believe the same about McCain.
On the issues and candidate
qualities
In the survey, Obama also holds
commanding leads on the issues —
especially economic ones. He has a
39-point advantage over McCain in
handling health care (59 to 20 percent),
a 21-point edge on improving the economy
(49 to 28), a 21-point lead on the
mortgage and housing crisis (45 to 24),
a 17-point edge on dealing with the Wall
Street crisis (42 to 25), a 14-point
lead on taxes (48 to 34) and a 12-point
advantage on energy and the cost of gas
(44 to 32).
Obama has the edge in offering hope and
optimism (53 to 23), improving America’s
standing in the world (51 to 31) and
having the right temperament to be
president (50 to 30).
One other key advantage for Democrats is
the enthusiasm gap. Fifty-two percent of
Obama voters in the poll say they’re
excited to be voting for the Democratic
presidential nominee.
That’s compared with just 26 percent of
McCain voters who said that about the
GOP nominee, a percentage that’s down
eight points since the Republican
convention in early September.
Winning the base, but losing the
middle
What the poll shows is McCain — with 14
days until Election Day — has lost
ground with independent and swing
voters, Hart says.
“If you don’t win the middle in America,
you don’t win the election.”