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Michael Barone: Was Obama’s Bounce a Bubble? - Polls continue to show an unstable...
National Review Online ^ | August 02, 2008 | Michael Barone

Posted on 08/02/2008 11:03:24 AM PDT by neverdem









Was Obama’s Bounce a Bubble?
Polls continue to show an unstable presidential campaign.

By Michael Barone

Just when you think you’ve got the presidential race figured out, something comes along to upend your carefully wrought conclusions.

Mainstream media provided lavish coverage of Barack Obama’s trip abroad the week of July 21–25 and predicted he would get a bounce in the polls. Some of his supporters believe he has put the election away. Other observers employ the hackneyed and meaningless phrase, “It’s his to lose.”

The poll numbers tell a different and more nuanced story. The two national tracking polls showed Obama getting a bounce while he was in Europe, especially after his speech before 200,000 or so Berliners in the Tiergarten. Gallup showed him rising from a 46–42 percent lead on July 22 to a 49–40 percent lead on July 26. The Rasmussen tracking poll showed him rising from a 47–45 percent lead on July 23 (reflecting the previous days’ polling) to 49–43 percent bulge on July 26.

But over the next several days, Obama bounced back down. Gallup showed him leading by a statistically insignificant 45–44 percent as of July 31. That’s the closest the race has been in Gallup all that month. Rasmussen had him down to 48–46 percent on the same day. The world tour bounce has begun to look like a bubble.

Obama may have gotten some lasting benefits from the trip. He can now say that he has been in Afghanistan and that he has visited Iraq for the first time since January 2006. Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki’s seeming acceptance of Obama’s withdrawal timetable may have undermined John McCain’s argument that an Obama presidency could lead to disaster there. And there are a substantial number of American voters who will be attracted by a candidate who seems to pass what John Kerry in 2004 called a “global test.”

Still, the basic dynamics of the race haven’t changed. Obama appears to have a small lead. But he doesn’t come close to maximizing the Democratic vote. And there is some evidence that the balance of enthusiasm has shifted and that young people — who seemed to turn out and vote for Obama in unusually high numbers in the primaries and caucuses — are no long so enthusiastic about him.

The first bit of evidence comes from the July 10–13 ABC/Washington Post poll. It asked registered voters if they were “certain” to vote. Only 46 percent of voters under 30 said they were — substantially lower than the 66 percent who said so in the ABC/Washington Post poll taken Feb. 28–March 2, at a time when Obama was enjoying a string of primary and caucus victories and before the sermons of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright were circulated on youtube.com on March 13. The 46 percent of young voters who said in July they were certain to vote was far lower than the 79 percent of 65-and-over voters who said the same.

The second bit of evidence comes from the Gallup/USAToday poll taken July 25-27. This poll showed that when you narrowed the base of respondents down from registered voters to likely voters, John McCain was ahead 49 percent to 45 percent. That’s a vivid contrast from the contemporaneous Gallup and Rasmussen tracking polls, and it was the first national poll since May showing McCain ahead.


The Gallup/USAT poll employs an unusual technique to decide who is a likely voter, and accordingly its results tend to vary more widely than other polls; political insiders tend to take its numbers seriously less as an indication of where the race is than as an indication of which candidate is benefiting, at least for a moment, from the balance of enthusiasm.

For most of this year, the balance of enthusiasm has been in favor of Democrats and Obama. Turnout in Democratic primaries was about 50 percent higher than in Republican primaries while both parties’ nominations were seriously contested; Democrats generally and Obama in particular have raised far more money than Republicans; McCain voters have typically expressed less enthusiasm for their candidate than Obama voters have for theirs.

These poll results suggest that something — the rantings of the Rev. Wright or Obama’s skinbacks on issues like Iraq and terrorist surveillance — has dampened enthusiasm for him, particularly among the young. The hope that his candidacy would benefit from a historically unprecedented turnout of young voters seems more audacious than it did a short time ago.

Nothing about an election is harder to predict than turnout, and experience shows that the balance of enthusiasm can change abruptly and in unpredicted ways. The poll numbers examined here are of course not the final word, or anything close to it, and this campaign could take many twists and turns before it is over. But you could do worse than expected the unexpected.

— Michael Barone is a nationally syndicated columnist.

© 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; 2008polls; barone; electionpresident; elections; michaelbarone; nobama08; obama; obamasbigadventure; obamavisit
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1 posted on 08/02/2008 11:03:25 AM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

May I kindly suggest we begin recycling reverend wright a bit. ;-)


2 posted on 08/02/2008 11:04:38 AM PDT by Maelstorm (I don't want a government that can guarantee me a life long job at a department store.)
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To: Maelstorm

October seems about Wright.


3 posted on 08/02/2008 11:11:14 AM PDT by fogofbobegabay
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To: Maelstorm

Recycling the good reverend now only in small doses, just to keep it as background noise. Bring it up in October. I really think the more the young voters think about the Obama listening to the old racist, their enthusiasm will be dampened.

With the young, Obamamania may already be yesterday’s fad. In November they will be back in their college dorms & apartments taking bong hits. Come November 5, they will be saying “you mean the election was YESTERDAY?. Wow, I was soooooo stoned yesterday. Was that Women’s and Transgender Studies exam yesterday too?”


4 posted on 08/02/2008 11:14:15 AM PDT by henkster (Politics is the art of telling a bigger and more believable lie more often than your opponent)
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To: neverdem
"Mainstream media provided lavish coverage of Barack Obama’s trip abroad the week of July 21–25 and predicted he would get a bounce in the polls."

When someone stands on Nazi soil and talks smack about the good ol'USofA there will be no bounce. That the MSM can't figure that simple notion out reveals them for who they are: America-haters!

NO BOUNCE FOR THE STUTTERING DUMBO!

5 posted on 08/02/2008 11:14:58 AM PDT by avacado
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To: neverdem

McCain bump.


6 posted on 08/02/2008 11:15:49 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: neverdem

Mark my words; Come November, political correctness won’t be following voters into the voting booth, where nobody knows how a person votes. Obama is toast.


7 posted on 08/02/2008 11:15:55 AM PDT by umgud
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To: neverdem

**This poll showed that when you narrowed the base of respondents down from registered voters to likely voters, John McCain was ahead 49 percent to 45 percent. **

This is good news for Republicans. Gear up for the final months!


8 posted on 08/02/2008 11:18:24 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: avacado

Dude, what are you racist against Germans?

Obama wasn’t on Nazi soil, he was on German soil.

Big difference between SS Nazis and the common German man drafted to fight.


9 posted on 08/02/2008 11:25:30 AM PDT by Transformers
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To: Transformers

Comments like that piss me off. I have a few drops of German blood in me, - what am I supposed to be embarrassed of those ancestors? England and France started far more wars than Germany ever did. Read your history.


10 posted on 08/02/2008 11:28:13 AM PDT by Transformers
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To: neverdem

It was a media fart...


11 posted on 08/02/2008 11:36:21 AM PDT by johnny7 ("Duck I says... ")
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To: Transformers

“Big difference between SS Nazis and the common German man drafted to fight.”

I’m not defending avacado’s silly NAZI statement, but I need to point out that to the dead there was no difference “between SS Nazis and the common German man drafted to fight.” None.


12 posted on 08/02/2008 11:38:39 AM PDT by Owl558 ("Those who remember George Satayana are doomed to repeat him")
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To: avacado

The “stuttering dumbo?” OMG, how funny is that?

Love it!!! Thanks for the laugh!


13 posted on 08/02/2008 11:48:26 AM PDT by CaliforniaCon
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To: umgud

RE: “Mark my words; Come November, political correctness won’t be following voters into the voting booth, where nobody knows how a person votes. Obama is toast”

I believe you’ve summed it up nicely. I never thought he could win — and if by some chance he does, I’ll eat my McCain hat!


14 posted on 08/02/2008 11:50:24 AM PDT by CaliforniaCon
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To: Transformers
"Dude, what are you racist against Germans? Obama wasn’t on Nazi soil, he was on German soil. Big difference between SS Nazis and the common German man drafted to fight."

I was using a bit of hyperbole. But to criticize the USA while in Germany after the USA trounced the Nazis is just a very bad thing to do.

15 posted on 08/02/2008 11:50:38 AM PDT by avacado
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To: Salvation

This is good news for Republicans. Gear up for the final months!

McCain winning is not good news, but it could be a whole lot worse considering the options.


16 posted on 08/02/2008 11:53:37 AM PDT by proud okie
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To: neverdem

This big turn around did not start until McCain took some excellent advice as posted by many FReepers on this forum.

The advice being, “John pull your head out of your butt, start listening to your very wise base and spank this Obama for being nothing more than a childish naïveté Narcissistic fraud”.

Personally, I want to see a good fight not two guys clutching for twelve rounds.

Just my lowly opinion John McCain but the candidate for president does not deserve nor is he worth his salt, if that person is not willing to stand up and fight for the job.

What say you O’Really?


17 posted on 08/02/2008 12:00:44 PM PDT by OKIEDOC (OBAMA aka Post Turtle the Forest Gump of American Politics ABORTION -Liberal Child Abuse.)
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To: neverdem
Young people watch much more TV and expect their politicians to speak with the fluidity of a practiced actor. This is how they judge candidates. Style over substance.

Obama seemed to exhibit a certain eloquence back in the spring and it contrasted with President Bush. But increasingly, despite the mendacious cover-up press that once thought the spelling of "potato" a major issue, young people are beginning to see Obama as more and more of a stumbler and bumbler when his teleprompter is not there to save him. He does not handle curve balls well at all. Hence their fading enthusiasm.

18 posted on 08/02/2008 12:10:16 PM PDT by cookcounty (Obama, the last man to figure out the Surge ---Except for Nevada's Hopeless Harry)
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To: umgud
You really summed everything up in one sentence. Right now it is “sexy” to say you are for Obama, and even respond so in a poll, but when it is time to throw down, I feel many will play it safe. I think you can take every poll you see now and subtract 3% from Obama and add 1.5% to McCain.
19 posted on 08/02/2008 12:30:03 PM PDT by lt.america (Captain was already taken)
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To: proud okie

A McCain win might not be “good news,” but an Obama win would certainly be bad news!


20 posted on 08/02/2008 12:35:44 PM PDT by karnage
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