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CORRECTION -- 06/17/08 -- An article in Sunday’s Review-Journal mischaracterized Nevada’s voting history in presidential elections. Since 1912, the state has voted for the winner of every presidential election, with the exception of 1976.

NEW R-J NEVADA POLL: McCain 44%, Obama 42%

McCain, Obama split vote, with many still undecided







As the presidential candidates square off for the general election, Nevadans are closely divided between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain, according to a statewide poll.

If the election were held today, 44 percent would vote for McCain, 42 percent for Obama, while 14 percent of likely voters remain undecided, according to the poll of 625 likely voters, conducted Monday through Wednesday by Washington, D.C.-based Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. for the Review-Journal and reviewjournal.com.


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  • The presidential contest is well within the poll's margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. It confirms the conventional wisdom that Nevada is a swing state that might throw its electoral votes to either candidate in November.

    "It's a statistical tie. It's a toss-up," said pollster Brad Coker, managing partner of Mason-Dixon. "Nevada is a battleground. It's clearly a state both candidates, both campaigns, both parties are going to pay a lot of attention to.

    With five months until Election Day, a lot can and will happen, Coker noted. But the poll shows that the two candidates begin the general election season evenly matched in Nevada, a state that has voted for the winner of every presidential race with the exception of 1976.

    The poll found that as far as Nevada voters are concerned, Obama appears to be better off without his erstwhile rival, Hillary Clinton, on the ticket.

    Asked what effect having Clinton as the Democratic vice presidential candidate would have on their vote, 19 percent of Nevadans said it would make them more likely to vote for Obama, while 28 percent said they would be less likely to vote for him. Fifty-one percent said it would have no effect.

    Among undecided voters, 25 percent said Clinton's presence would make them more inclined to vote for the Democratic ticket, but 38 percent said she would make them less likely to vote Democratic.

    "Those numbers are real clear that she doesn't help the ticket," Coker said. "The undecided voters especially are more likely to vote against him, and he can't afford that."

    A spokesman for the McCain campaign noted that Obama had campaigned and organized heavily in Nevada in advance of the Jan. 19 caucuses, yet failed to build a lead against McCain.

    "It's very early and we're not going to take anything for granted, but we feel Senator McCain's message plays especially well here," Rick Gorka said.

    "Nevada is a maverick, independent state. I don't think Nevadans feel that government should continually raise taxes and increase spending. When it comes down to John McCain's message of fiscal responsibility versus the Democratic message of raising taxes, Nevadans are going to realize they'd rather have their own money."

    But an Obama campaign spokeswoman said McCain's policies would be rejected by Nevada voters in the end. Shannon Gilson pointed to the record 118,000 participants in the Jan. 19 caucuses, the majority of whom chose Clinton over Obama.

    "Nevadans stood up for change in record numbers in January, and they know that a candidate who is offering more of the same failed Bush economic policies that benefit the wealthiest Americans isn't the change we need," Gilson said.

    The poll, she said, clearly shows that Nevada is a battleground state.

    "We will be building on our statewide network of volunteers and supporters from Las Vegas to Elko to put together an aggressive general election campaign and work hard for every vote between now and November."

    The poll's breakdown into gender, party, regional, ethnic and age groups gives an indicator of the sources of the two candidates' support.

    The candidates' appeal to different age groups is especially striking. Obama did better with young voters, while McCain prevailed among older voters.

    Voters age 18 to 34 preferred Obama by a wide margin, 55 percent to 31 percent. Among voters age 35 to 49, the two candidates were tied at 43 percent each. But McCain was preferred by voters 50 to 64, 48 percent to 39 percent, and by voters 65 and older, 50 percent to 34 percent.

    "Obama winning the youth vote is not surprising, but he's got to keep them motivated, because they tend to turn out in lower numbers," said Jennifer Duffy, an analyst for the Cook Political Report, a nonpartisan newsletter in Washington, D.C.

    "They're tied in that middle tier, and that could be where it's decided."

    Duffy said it was somewhat surprising to see McCain winning older voters by such a healthy margin. In national surveys, she said, the 71-year-old McCain has sometimes faced an age issue with "those older voters who don't think they could do it."

    In another crucial demographic, Obama, 46, prevails among Hispanic voters, with 53 percent, but nearly one-fifth are undecided and McCain still draws 28 percent.

    Hispanics are likely to be targeted by both campaigns as a perceived swing vote group, Duffy said. McCain already has aired ads on Spanish-language radio in Nevada.

    Obama runs away with the black vote, 87 percent to 7 percent, while McCain gets a majority of white voters, 51 percent to Obama's 35 percent.

    McCain was stronger among men, 49 percent to 37 percent, while Obama was stronger with women, 47 percent to 39 percent.

    Obama won Clark County, predominantly Democratic and home to 70 percent of the state's population, by a margin of 46 percent to 39 percent in the poll. The two candidates were close in Republican-leaning Washoe County, 45 percent for McCain versus 42 percent.

    In the rock-ribbed Republican rural areas of the state, McCain took 60 percent of the vote in the poll to Obama's 27 percent.

    McCain, who has been able to lay claim to his party's nomination longer than Obama, sewed up 78 percent of the Republican vote, while Obama had 71 percent of Democrats.

    With 15 percent of Democrats saying they'll vote for McCain and another 14 percent undecided, that's 29 percent of his own party not currently supporting Obama, a high number that Duffy said might be the residual effect of Clinton's candidacy.

    Both candidates have staked their campaigns on their appeal to voters who aren't registered with a political party. In that group, McCain polled markedly better than Obama, 43 percent to 32 percent.

    A larger proportion of independents, 25 percent, were undecided than any other demographic group in the poll.

    Pollster Coker said that with Democrats ahead in voter registration in Nevada and the national mood hostile to Republicans, McCain will have to hold on to his lead among independents in order to have a chance in the state.

    "This race is going to be a battle for independents, and right now, in the battle for independents, McCain is ahead," he said.

    Contact reporter Molly Ball at mball @reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2919.

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    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    Maria wrote on September 04, 2008 09:22 AM: I am a conservative Christian, and I was thinking of voting for McCain/Palin
    But yesterday I heard something very frightening that I must share with you all. I heard my 15 yr old daughter and her friends talking about Palins daughter Bristol. Now I like Sarah Palin, and lets face it, she is the face of the McCain/Palin ticket. Not him. Doesn't anyone realize how much harder it will be to tall your children that having sex when they aren't even seniors in high school is wrong if we elect sarah? Kids see her as a role model. Teen pregnancy is a very big problem for our country. One that strikes closer to home then terrorism or even economics. Kids do as you do, not as you say, and seeing such a charismatic, prominent family condone premarital sex and drunk driving(by action not by word as her husband has a dui) will be a terrible influence! I ask you as a mother to consider how it would feel to have your teenage girl announce she is pregnant, or your teenage son announce he wishes to marry? Tell me that they won't be encouraged by the actions of tha Palin family. Saying yes to Palin at this time will be sending that message to our kids.


    turner wrote on July 04, 2008 07:42 AM: IM INDPENDENT AND JOHN MCAIN ALL THE WAY AND 9 OF MY CLOSET FRIENDS MCCAIN YOU WILL GET A SUPPRIZE COM NOV------


    Vegas wrote on July 03, 2008 04:11 PM: I registered to vote as an Independent so that I can vote for Obama in November. I hope there are many more like me out there! Let's turn Nevada blue.


    Obama 08!!!!!!!!!!!


    Sad Summerlin wrote on June 16, 2008 10:52 PM: "Sad Summerlin Wrote" --- Did you miss my point? It is a good thing we live in the USA, otherwise we would have to worry about the problems that are happening in the rest of the world surrounding elections...

    Because the "wacko right-wing garbage" is allowed on the air with the loopy liberal poppycock on the AM radio means we live in a GREAT NATION.

    Let's not forget that...

    We can slam each other, sensationalize drama on both sides of the isle, and use inflammatory language (although I do not suggest it)... and we get heated debate...

    But in the end, we remember we are Americans... we are free...

    All you have to do is read the news about Zimbabwe or Sudan or Kosovo to find how less fortunate countries handle debate...


    Sad Summerlin Wrote: wrote on June 16, 2008 09:41 PM: "Sad Summerlin wrote on June 15, 2008 11:00 PM: Wow... thankfully we are a civilized nation that allows for heated debate. The pure hatred expressed here between individuals would translate to car bombs, burnt wives, assassinated opponents and general disarray in other countries."

    Uh, probably not, Summerlin. This is the United States, with the same freedoms as the rest of the first world.

    And, by the way, have you listened to the wacko right-wing garbage by the sensationalists on AM radio? Nobody is "car-bombing" Michael Savage, although both of his psychiatrists have probably fantasized about it.


    Non-AM Radio, Wesley Clark Bio wrote on June 16, 2008 09:27 PM: Whiteberry, turn off the AM radio:

    Wesley Kanne Clark (born December 23, 1944) is a retired General of the United States Army. Clark was valedictorian of his class at West Point, was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to the University of Oxford where he obtained a degree in PPE (Philosophy, Politics & Economics), and later graduated from the Command and General Staff College with a master's degree in military science. He spent 34 years in the Army and the Department of Defense, receiving many military decorations, several honorary knighthoods, and a Presidential Medal of Freedom.


    Whiteberry wrote on June 16, 2008 09:15 PM: serena1313, you are very funny. Why would you use a quote of Wesley Clark? This man is a known whacko with no credibility at all and you think his quote has any merit? Unbelievable!!


    Superpatriot, Conservative, Timothy McVeigh Loved McCain wrote on June 16, 2008 09:07 PM: Who supports McCain? Which of our martyrs supports McCain?

    Clearly, Timothy McVeigh, the worst mass murderer in American history would prefer John McCain:

    "McVeigh spent time on the gun show circuit, moving from show to show. He sold copies of The Turner Diaries, and a flare gun that he said could shoot down an 'ATF helicopter'. One author said, 'In the gun show culture, McVeigh found a home. Though he remained skeptical of some of the most extreme ideas being bandied around, he liked talking to people there about the United Nations, the federal government, and possible threats to American liberty.

    McVeigh also used methamphetamines.

    McVeigh: decorated veteran and a McCain man all the way.


    Kevin wrote on June 16, 2008 12:22 PM: Oh Fausto..you are clear on what you do not know. Too bad you are not watching the news or educated. More were killed in Afghanistan that in Iraq by last numbers. I guess you and Tim are having your own COUP. Either have ideas, be productive, and respond or just keep your education to yourself.


    Obama's racist pastor wrote on June 16, 2008 10:46 AM: "McCain is a scary, scary guy." "He's supported by the wacko fundamentalist religious right ...."

    oooh, scary ... NOT!
    Obama is supported by HAMAS, has a terrorist friend (Ayers), helped fund a PLO supporter (Khalidi), is supported by the Black Panther Party and other leftwing radical groups, and supported by extremist racist pastor mentor Rev Wright who said "God d*** America!" and blamed the worlds problems on "White man's greed". The more you know about Barack Obama, the more wrong he becomes for the country.

    http://no-bama.blogspot.com

    The fact that some strong Christians support McCain is more an indication that Obama is an elitist who thinks people "cling to God" when they lose jobs, etc. McCain is a moderate and a former POW and war hero who will do what is right for our military in the field. McCain will win in Iraq and bring the troops home with honor.

    Attacking McCain for not being for 'womens issues' is just a code word for him not being 100% proabortion extremist like Obama. McCain opposes partial birth abortion and opposes taxpayer funding for abortions, Obama favors both.




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