Virginia exit polls
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20 November 2008, by
19 November 2008, by unknown Find the latest Lehigh Valley and presidential election results, exit polls, updates, news, polling reports and more here on lehighvalleylive.com.
19 November 2008, by unknown In the latest Rasmussen Reports poll Chambliss has the support of 69% of white voters while 91% of black voters favor Martin. Those numbers are virtually identical to Election Day exit polling. According to the exit polls, ...
19 November 2008, by
<img alt="" height="1" width="1"> <a href="http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=T&ct=us/4-0&fd=A&url=http://businessmirror.com.ph/index.php%3Foption%3Dcom_content%26view%3Darticle%26id%3D2187:10-lessons-from-the-2008-us-presidential-election%26catid%3D34:perspective%26Itemid%3D62&cid=1272348007&ei=JmwlSaijLY3I9ATI3sW9AQ&usg=AFQjCNEE-DPpBdkmLa7QumFHuD8FFoPbGA">10 lessons from the 2008 US presidential election</a> Business Mirror, Philippines - <nobr>Nov 19, 2008</nobr> True enough, after the polls closed, national exit polls showed Obama winning 66 percent of voters under 30, higher than Ronald Reagan’s 59 percent in 1984 ... |
18 November 2008, by
<img alt="" height="1" width="1"> <a href="http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=T&ct=us/9-0&fd=A&url=http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php%3FID%3D441794%26Category%3D14%26subCategoryID%3D&cid=1272522259&ei=JmwlSaijLY3I9ATI3sW9AQ&usg=AFQjCNG6npV7fPBAoV8LJPXuMBPlL1iCrQ">Race didn't decide election</a> Canton Repository (subscription), OH - <nobr>Nov 17, 2008</nobr> Those who said in exit polls that race was the most important or one of several important factors in their decision — 9 percent — backed Obama 53 percent to ... |
10 November 2008, by So. CA Proposition 8. Obviously, I'm beyond disappointed that it passed. I actually seem to find it inconcievable, on some level, that so many people could vote for something, =anything=, that began with the phrase "eliminate the right". I know that, clearly, they did, but every time I try to wrap my ...
5 November 2008, by Digby found this: Wolf Blitzer, CNN anchor: "My sense is that (the winner of the Presidential election) will see this as a mandate on his policies, because (his Party) also did very well in the House of Representatives, did very well in the U.S. Senate, picking up seats in both. He gets over 50 percent ...
5 November 2008, by Back in 2000, when Al Gore tried to have the election decided by lawyers instead of the voters, the mess was sorted out by a series of court decisions, the last one the United States Supreme Court. When the high court finally ruled that the law in Florida trumped the lawyers for Gore, emotions were ...
5 November 2008, by Early exit polls gave Barack Obama the lead over Arizona Sen. John McCain in the presidential swing states of Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Ohio and Nevada, predicting his presidential win later Tuesday night.
5 November 2008, by Projections have Obama taking Ohio. Big, big news! Also, New Mexico projected to flip from red to blue! Thank you Governor Richardson! Now more than ever Richardson is likely to have a place in an Obama admin. Perhaps Sec of State. And Florida is looking good for Obama as well. If that is the case, Virginia and North Carolina aren’t nearly as important, but it would be much better for him if he takes those states as well. Mandate, mandate, mandate! Recent numbers show McCain looking a lot better
5 November 2008, by CNN projects McCain will take West Virginia. That doesn’t really surprise me. I was surprised some weeks back when there was buzz that Obama was making ground there. Having relatives there, and knowing something about the state, I had a hard time believing that it would vote for a black candidate. It is a Democratic state in many respects, though; projections indicate that W.Va will retain two Dem Senators. MSNBC electoral college projections: Obama: 200 McCain:85 CNN projects: Obama: 194 McCain
5 November 2008, by
<img alt="" height="1" width="1"> <a href="http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=T&ct=us/7-0&fd=A&url=http://www.utmpacer.com/news/2008/11/04/CampusNews/New-Exit.Polls.Add.West.Virginia.Georgia.To.Mccain-3524152.shtml&cid=1266993633&ei=JmwlSaijLY3I9ATI3sW9AQ&usg=AFQjCNG2RA8m31M0MJA8oxCC_e96Q-552g">New exit polls add West Virginia, Georgia to McCain.</a> UTM Pacer, TN - <nobr>Nov 4, 2008</nobr> With the most recent additions of Georgia and West Virginia, McCain now holds 69 electoral votes. Continue to follow The Pacer for more updates throughout ... |
5 November 2008, by A huge win if it holds up. Al Franken would be the 4th pickup (in addition to Hagen in NC, Shaheen in NH and Warner in Virginia.) The Udalls in Colorado and New Mexico would be the 5th and and 6th. Merkley in Oregon and Begich in Alaska would make 8 pickups in the Senate.
5 November 2008, by Gregory on MSNBC is grilling David Axelrod, chief campaign strategist for Obama, on which red state he believe will flip first. So far the states that have been were called for the candidates that they were pretty much expected to go to. Pennsylvania was a battle ground state, certainly, but Obama has been leading there for some time. Some thought that McCain might be able to eek out a win in New Hampshire, because he’s been popular there in the past. But no dice this time. Sorry Johnny boy! I’m
5 November 2008, by
5 November 2008, by Hmmmm…I actually listened to Rush at my desk today and seem to recall him saying that the networks would be calling PA for Obama before they even started counting the votes - presumably in order to set up a “theft” narrative if needed - and that is what’s just happened. Many people registering surprise ...
5 November 2008, by AFP CBS calls W.Va. for McCain Charleston Gazette - 25 minutes ago By Staff reports Based on exit polls, Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain will win the state of West Virginia, according to CBS News. Few problems as voters wait hours to cast ballots The Associated ...
5 November 2008, by As of 7:30 p.m. EST, polls in three more states -- North Carolina, Ohio and West Virginia -- have closed. So far, though, we don't have any calls. It seems like the various networks are going to be very, very careful about projecting winners in any battleground states. Based on the ...
5 November 2008, by Based on information as the polls closed, NPR projected Democratic candidate Barack Obama will win the state of Vermont, while Republican candidate John McCain appeared poised to take Kentucky. In the key swing state of Virginia, early exit polls showed Obama leading ...
5 November 2008, by 2008_1104_virginia.jpg The polls closed in Virginia at 7 p.m. It's still too early to call as of 7:30 p.m., but that's not stopping the cable news networks from getting going on the speculation. CNN's exit polls show Obama winning among men, and winning among ...
5 November 2008, by That’s my advice, and it’s Jim Geraghty’s advice, too: We have typically wildly contradictory data. We have Gawker’s initial numbers that would make McCain fans think they have a real shot, and Drudge, which has Obama ahead in Pennsylvania by 15. Drudge also has Ohio, Indiana, and Florida too close ...
5 November 2008, by
5 November 2008, by
5 November 2008, by Barack Obama appeared to be heading for victory over John McCain tonight, with the Democratic candidate on course to take at least half a dozen battleground states that had been held by the Republicans, according to unpublished exit polls. Obama was enjoying double-digit leads in many ...
5 November 2008, by James Ogley Obama: 0 McCain: 8 270 to win. A few hours until the polls close in the East and it's looking like the turnout is going to be huge. I'll be updating this post over the course of the night and here's a list of sites/channels I'm monitoring (again updated if I add more): BBC News ...
4 November 2008, by Take with a giant grain of salt (please read Pollster.com and Nate Silver on why you should be highly skeptical), but I have received the following numbers from multiple sources: Florida: Obama 52 percent/McCain 44 percent Georgia: Obama 47 percent/McCain 51 percent Indiana: Obama 52 percent/McCain ...
4 November 2008, by The time is 2:32 PM on the West Coast, and I&##x27;m watching FNC with Bill Hemmer (loser) and Megyn Kelly hosting their &##x22;America&##x27;s Election HQ.&##x22; They brought out exit polls from Virginia, Ohio and Indiana, and as many Freepers should already ...
4 November 2008, by
<img alt="" height="1" width="1"> <a href="http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=T&ct=us/6-0&fd=A&url=http://weblog.signonsandiego.com/weblogs/afb/archives/028878.html&cid=0&ei=JmwlSaijLY3I9ATI3sW9AQ&usg=AFQjCNEQpIGe9YIRCQPFK51AZctj22FbUg">Obama appears to be up by about 4% in Virginia exit poll; dead ...</a> San Diego Union Tribune, United States - <nobr>Nov 4, 2008</nobr> Of course, take this with a huge grain of salt, given how wrong exit polls were in 2004. -- 22% of the vote is African American and Obama is winning 91% of ... |
4 November 2008, by Sorry, Dianne Feinstein! Exit polls are useless and wrong (actually they're not entirely wrong and useless except that no one knows how to read them, except Marc Ambinder). But they're out, now, and soon they'll be everywhere. Let's get to it: "Senate sources" say the Dems will be ...
4 November 2008, by Gawker says it has seen early exit polls from Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida, and North Carolina that all show a closer race than did the last telephone polls. In fact, in all but Pennsylvania these alleged exit polls show basically a deadheat. ...
