Election Polls

2012 Polls 2010 Polls2008 Polls

 

 

 

2008 State Polls

State Obama McCain
Battleground States [source]
Florida 51 48
Nevada 55 43
Colorado 54 45
Minnesota 54 44
Missouri 49 50
North Dakota 45 53
Pennsylvania 55 44
Iowa 54 45
South Dakota 45 53
New Mexico 57 42
Georgia 47 52
Ohio 52 47
New Hampshire 54 45
Wisconsin 56 43
Virginia 53 47
Arkansas 39 59
North Carolina 50 49
Indiana 50 49
Blue States
California 61 37
Connecticut 61 38
Delaware 62 37
Hawaii 72 27
Illinois 62 37
Maine 58 40
Maryland 62 37
Massachusetts 62 36
Michigan 57 41
New Jersey 57 42
New York 63 36
Oregon 57 41
Rhode Island 63 35
Vermont 68 31
Washington 58 41
Wisconsin 56 43
Red States
Alabama 39 61
Arizona 45 54
Idaho 36 61
Kansas 42 57
Kentucky 41 58
Louisiana 40 59
Montana 47 50
Nebraska 42 57
Oklahoma 34 66
South Carolina 45 54
Tennessee 42 57
Texas 44 55
Utah 34 63
West Virginia 43 56
[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Democrat Polls

Tulsa World / Sooner Poll
Date: 1/27-30
Oklahoma
Added: 2/3/08
Est. MoE = 4.7% [?]

Quote:

"It appears that Clinton will be the winner in the Oklahoma primary," Soltow said. "What happens to Obama is largely dependent on where Edwards' votes go.

"Regardless of where they go, it doesn't change the likely outcome. The only thing it will do is determine who picks up the most delegates."

Hillary Clinton41%
John Edwards24%
Barack Obama17%
Unsure16%
Other2%
Source


Survey USA
Date: 1/27
Oklahoma
Added: 1/30/08
Est. MoE = 3.6% [?]

Quote:

Results are virtually unchanged from those of an identical SurveyUSA poll conducted two weeks ago. Clinton leads by 39 points among women; Edwards leads by 7 points among men -- a 46 point gender gap. By more than 2:1, Oklahoma likely Democratic primary voters say the economy is the issue the the next president should focus on ahead of all overs; among the voters choosing the economy as the most important issue, Clinton leads Edwards by 22. Among those who say Iraq is the most important issue, Clinton leads by 15.
Hillary Clinton44%
John Edwards27%
Barack Obama19%
Unsure3%
Other6%
Source


Survey USA
Date: 1/11-13
Oklahoma
Added: 1/16/08
Est. MoE = 3.8% [?]

Quote:

Men and women see the contest in stark contrast. Among men, Edwards leads Clinton by 6 and leads Obama by 12. Among women, Clinton leads the two men by 40 points. Edwards also leads among Conservatives. 37% of Democrats say they might change their mind between now and the 02/05/08 Primary. Among the rest, who say their mind is made-up, Clinton polls at 53%.
Hillary Clinton45%
John Edwards25%
Barack Obama19%
Unsure4%
Other7%
Source


Republican Polls

Tulsa World / Sooner Poll
Date: 1/27-30
Oklahoma
Est. MoE = 5.5% [?]

Quote:

For Huckabee, a Baptist preacher, the bad news was that even evangelical Christians were more likely to support McCain. Only the most ardently religious -- those who attend services several times a week -- favored Huckabee.

Still, Huckabee's background and populist message have some enthusiastic followers.

"He seems to make more sense than the rest of them," said Charles Schmitt of Tulsa. "He seems to speak more on my level. I like the fact he's Southern Baptist. I'm a Southern Baptist."

John McCain40%
Mike Huckabee19%
Mitt Romney17%
Rudy Giuliani5%
Ron Paul3%
Unsure14%
Other2%
Source


Survey USA
Date: 1/27
Oklahoma
Est. MoE = 4.2% [?]

Quote:

Huckabee, in turn, is 9 points ahead of third-place finisher Mitt Romney, who takes 19% of the vote. Rudolph Giuliani and Ron Paul tie for last, at 6%. In the two weeks since an identical SurveyUSA poll, McCain is up 8; Huckabee is down 3; Romney is up 11. Romney has tripled his support among the two-thirds of Oklahoma Republican likely primary voters who identify themselves as conservatives. Huckabee leads by 12 among the youngest voters; McCain leads by 18 among the oldest. McCain leads by 3 among conservatives and by 24 among moderates. By nearly 2:1, Oklahoma likely Republican primary voters say the economy is the issue the the next president should focus on ahead of all overs; among the voters choosing the economy as the most important issue, McCain holds a 15 point lead over Huckabee. Among those who say immigration is the most important issue, Huckabee leads Romney by 3, and leads McCain by 15.
John McCain37%
Mike Huckabee28%
Mitt Romney19%
Rudy Giuliani6%
Ron Paul6%
Unsure3%
Other2%
Source


Survey USA
Date: 1/11-13
Oklahoma
Est. MoE = 4.0% [?]

Quote:

Huckabee leads by 8 among Conservatives. McCain leads by 15 among Moderates. Huckabee leads by 13 among Republicans who attend church regularly. McCain leads by 15 points among those who attend church occasionally and by 20 points among those who almost never attend church. Huckabee leads by 10 in Eastern OK. McCain leads by 6 in Western OK. Huckabee leads by 10 among pro-life voters. Among pro-choice voters, McCain is 14 points ahead of Giuliani, who is tied with Huckabee for 2nd in this demographic group. Huckabee's support is young. McCain's support is old. Half of likely voters say they may change their mind before the primary. Among the rest, who say their mind is made up, Huckabee runs 11 points stronger than McCain.
Mike Huckabee31%
John McCain29%
Fred Thompson13%
Rudy Giuliani11%
Mitt Romney8%
Ron Paul3%
Unsure5%
Other1%
Source


This is a monthly synopsis of many more 2008 Oklahoma polls.


[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Traffic During 2008 Election

usaelectionpolls traffic 

 

2008 Election Results - Presidential

Candidate Votes % EV
Obama      
McCain      
Nader      

2008 Predicted Electoral Math

2008 Democratic Primary Results

Candidate Delegates
Obama  
Clinton  
Edwards  
Richardson  
Dodd  
Kucinich  

2008 Republican Primary Results

Candidate Delegates
McCain  
Romney  
Huckabee  
Ron Paul  
Thompson  
Giuliani  

2008 Independent Candidates

tab Nader tab Bob Barr
tab McKinney tab Baldwin

Latest Presidential Tracking Polls 2008

Election Polls

 

© Copyright 2006-2010 nationalpolls.com, All Rights Reserved.