natedogg265
Tim Kaine 51, George Allen 44 among likely voters in new WaPo poll. ow.ly/ePntu — The Fix (@TheFix) October 28, 2012
Tim Kaine 51, George Allen 44 among likely voters in new WaPo poll. ow.ly/ePntu
They generally suck at this.
Oct. 27, 2000: Bush 49, Gore 42, CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll. — Mark Lotto (@marklotto) October 27, 2012
Oct. 27, 2000: Bush 49, Gore 42, CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll.
For those too young to know the context, Gore won the popular vote in 2000.
New Dem poll in Missouri: McCaskill 53, Akin 39. Republicans grimace. — The Fix (@TheFix) October 27, 2012
New Dem poll in Missouri: McCaskill 53, Akin 39. Republicans grimace.
I am looking for the poll
Don't listen to the GOP.
Obama, a Democrat, leads Republican nominee Mitt Romney 53 percent to 45 percent among likely voters in results released today from the annual St. Cloud State Survey. An “all others” category accounts for the remaining 2 percent of respondents in the poll, which has a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.
Latest MN poll, Obama + 8, at 53%on.sctimes.com/TggSLM#GOPBluffing — Ben LaBolt (@BenLaBolt) October 27, 2012
Latest MN poll, Obama + 8, at 53%on.sctimes.com/TggSLM#GOPBluffing
Sorry, we missed PPP's VA poll and Rasmussen's AZ poll. Re-running tonight's numbers with those included. — Nate Silver (@fivethirtyeight) October 26, 2012
Sorry, we missed PPP's VA poll and Rasmussen's AZ poll. Re-running tonight's numbers with those included.
Obama 73% to win w/ those polls added. Bottom line simple: Romney is trailing - slightly - in tipping point states. fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com — Nate Silver (@fivethirtyeight) October 26, 2012
Obama 73% to win w/ those polls added. Bottom line simple: Romney is trailing - slightly - in tipping point states. fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com
That CO and VA are still toss-ups makes Obama's map more resilient if something goes wrong in OH. Model still bearish on him in FL, however. — Nate Silver (@fivethirtyeight) October 26, 2012
That CO and VA are still toss-ups makes Obama's map more resilient if something goes wrong in OH. Model still bearish on him in FL, however.
Our new Iowa poll on behalf of @hcan finds Barack Obama leading Mitt Romney 49-47: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Our new Iowa poll on behalf of @hcan finds Barack Obama leading Mitt Romney 49-47: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
In Iowa Obama has banked a 68/32 lead among early voters. Romney up 55/39 with those yet to vote: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
In Iowa Obama has banked a 68/32 lead among early voters. Romney up 55/39 with those yet to vote: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
Our new Wisconsin poll on behalf of @hcan finds Barack Obama growing his lead in the state to 51-45: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Our new Wisconsin poll on behalf of @hcan finds Barack Obama growing his lead in the state to 51-45: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
Obama up 5 pts with independents in WI and has gained 9 pts in the last week with them in IA to go up 1: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Obama up 5 pts with independents in WI and has gained 9 pts in the last week with them in IA to go up 1: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
Voters in Wisconsin (52/45) and Iowa (50/45) both trust Obama more than Romney to protect Medicare: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Voters in Wisconsin (52/45) and Iowa (50/45) both trust Obama more than Romney to protect Medicare: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
Voters in Wisconsin (52/44) and Iowa (51/46) also both trust Obama over Romney to stand up for the middle class: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Voters in Wisconsin (52/44) and Iowa (51/46) also both trust Obama over Romney to stand up for the middle class: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
BREAKING: The Washington Post endorses President Obama. — Jonathan Capehart (@CapehartJ) October 25, 2012
BREAKING: The Washington Post endorses President Obama.
WaPo
On Economics
With no time to catch his breath, Mr. Obama designed and won approval for a stimulus bill that slowed job loss and helped restore confidence. He engineered a rescue of the auto industry. The steady experts he put in charge of economic policy, notably Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, navigated between the Democratic Party’s left, which urged populist measures that would have been expensive and ineffectual, and an obstructionist Republican Party, which at times seemed content to inflict great harm on the country. The industrial-policy element of the recovery plan, favoring high-speed rail where it’s not needed and electric cars that consumers won’t buy, wasted a lot of money. But on balance the administration, working with the Federal Reserve, succeeded in its core mission. The rebound of the Dow Jones Industrial Average from 6,626 in March 2009 to above 13,000 today is no comfort to the many Americans who remain unemployed or poorer than before the crisis. But it reflects a recovery of the faith upon which every economy depends.
Mr. Romney has criticized that record, often persuasively. But his policy prescriptions — on Afghanistan, Iran and Syria, to name three — hardly differ. Neither he nor his running mate has foreign-policy experience. And his unscripted moments have not inspired confidence: calling Russia America’s greatest foe, for example, or delivering intemperate outbursts while the United States was trying to negotiate an exit for a human rights activist in China or when its diplomats in the Middle East came under attack. Mr. Romney has offered no evidence that he would do better in the world.
By contrast, the president understands the urgency of the problems as well as anyone in the country and is committed to solving them in a balanced way. In a second term, working with an opposition that we hope would be chastened by the failure of its scorched-earth campaign against him, he is far more likely than his opponent to succeed. That makes Mr. Obama by far the superior choice.
On @cbsthismorning General Colin Powell endorses Barack Obama, will vote for him and Biden in November — Norah O'Donnell (@NorahODonnell) October 25, 2012
On @cbsthismorning General Colin Powell endorses Barack Obama, will vote for him and Biden in November
General Colin Powell endorses President Obama for re-election - @cbsthismorning — Breaking Politics(@breakingpol) October 25, 2012
General Colin Powell endorses President Obama for re-election - @cbsthismorning
Nice RT @norahodonnell: On @cbsthismorning Gen Colin Powell, endorsing Obama, calls Romney's foreign policy positions "a moving target" — JamalSimmons (@JamalSimmons) October 25, 2012
Nice RT @norahodonnell: On @cbsthismorning Gen Colin Powell, endorsing Obama, calls Romney's foreign policy positions "a moving target"
On Romney, Gen. Colin Powell says: I don't sense he has thought through these issues as thoroughly as he should have #PowellThisMorning — CBS This Morning (@CBSThisMorning) October 25, 2012
On Romney, Gen. Colin Powell says: I don't sense he has thought through these issues as thoroughly as he should have #PowellThisMorning
On @cbsthismorning, Gen Colin Powell: "let's not forget that Congress bears a lot of responsibility for many of the problems we have now" — Norah O'Donnell (@NorahODonnell) October 25, 2012
On @cbsthismorning, Gen Colin Powell: "let's not forget that Congress bears a lot of responsibility for many of the problems we have now"
On @cbsthismorning General Colin Powell says Obama's actions protecting us from terrorism have been "very, very solid" — Norah O'Donnell (@NorahODonnell) October 25, 2012
On @cbsthismorning General Colin Powell says Obama's actions protecting us from terrorism have been "very, very solid"
BREAKING NEWS: Gen. Colin Powell on CBS This Morning endorses President Barack Obama — rolandsmartin (@rolandsmartin) October 25, 2012
BREAKING NEWS: Gen. Colin Powell on CBS This Morning endorses President Barack Obama
Is it noise or momentum? We'll find out.
Barack Obama now leads 49-48 in our national tracking. 3 point gain since he was down by 2 on Monday's release: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Barack Obama now leads 49-48 in our national tracking. 3 point gain since he was down by 2 on Monday's release: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
With 2 nights of post-debate polling factored in, Obama's cut Romney's lead with independents from 9 points to 2: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
With 2 nights of post-debate polling factored in, Obama's cut Romney's lead with independents from 9 points to 2: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
Obama's up 54/42 with women, 91/6 with African Americans, 58/37 with Hispanics, and 58/38 with young voters nationally: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 25, 2012
Obama's up 54/42 with women, 91/6 with African Americans, 58/37 with Hispanics, and 58/38 with young voters nationally: publicpolicypolling.com/main/2012/10/o…
TIME poll: Obama leads by 5 in Ohio, boosted by early voting | ti.me/SunbNt (via @timepolitics) — TIME.com (@TIME) October 24, 2012
TIME poll: Obama leads by 5 in Ohio, boosted by early voting | ti.me/SunbNt (via @timepolitics)
Time poll of Ohio: Obama 49, Romney 44. — Markos Moulitsas (@markos) October 24, 2012
Time poll of Ohio: Obama 49, Romney 44.
RT @aaltman82: New @time Ohio poll: Obama leads Romney, 49% to 44%. | ti.me/RDzZkx — Sam Stein (@samsteinhp) October 24, 2012
RT @aaltman82: New @time Ohio poll: Obama leads Romney, 49% to 44%. | ti.me/RDzZkx
I love kossacks. I dare anyone to tell me we're not enthusiastic.
Obama also gained 2 on RAND and PPP.
Our national tracking for Sunday through Tuesday is back to a tie with Obama and Romney both at 48: publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2011/10211… — PublicPolicyPolling (@ppppolls) October 24, 2012
Our national tracking for Sunday through Tuesday is back to a tie with Obama and Romney both at 48: publicpolicypolling.com/pdf/2011/10211…
Sorry for the lack of content. I just wanted to share this thought.
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