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Who gets your vote in 2012?


 Barack Obama (BO)

 Mike Huckabee (MH)
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Quinnipiac University

Added: 11/3/08

Quinnipiac University
Date: 10/27-11/2
Pennsylvania
Added: 11/3/08

Barack Obama52%
John McCain42%
Source


Obama leads 55 - 39 percent with women, and 49 - 45 percent with men. White voters split 47 - 47 percent, while black voters back Obama 95 - 1 percent. McCain leads 67 - 27 percent among evangelical Christians while Obama leads 51 - 46 percent among Catholics.

Independent voters back the Democrat 49 - 42 percent. Obama gets a 58 - 35 percent favorability, compared to McCain's 53 - 42 percent. Palin's favorability is a split 43 - 44 percent, while Biden gets 52 - 32 percent.

The economy is the most important issue, 55 percent of Pennsylvania voters say, and Obama will be more effective than McCain working with Congress, voters say 53 - 40 percent.

Criticism of McCain's ties to Bush is more harmful than criticism of his selection of Palin, voters say 58 - 27 percent, with 10 percent who say neither is harmful.

Voters split 39 - 40 percent on whether the "too liberal" tag hurts Obama more than the "too inexperienced" line, with 15 percent who say neither.

"In the end, Sen. John McCain's troops in Central Pennsylvania, led by veterans, disaffected Sen. Hillary Clinton supporters and God and gun clingers, will be swept over by a wave of young black and urban new voters, giving Sen. Barack Obama the Keystone State," said Clay F. Richards, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.

"Gov. Ed Rendell will bring out all the king's horses and all the king's men and women to insure a huge turnout that will provide not only an Obama victory, but maybe a job for the term- limited Governor in Washington next year."


 

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