Office | 2004 Results | Poll Results |
President | Bush +2 | Obama +17 |
Senate | Bowles +4 | Hagan +19 |
Governor | Easley +19 | Perdue +9 |
To put into perspective how important Wake County is toward Obama's surprisingly strong standing in the state, consider this:
-There are, still five and a half weeks out from the election, about 75,000 more registered voters than there were in Wake County for the 2004 election.
-Even if no one else registered to vote in the county, and turnout as a percentage was not higher this year than in 2004 there would be 410,000 voters this time compared to about 360,000 last time.
-That means if the election was today Obama would take the county by roughly 70,000 votes. Given that Kerry lost it by around 7,000 that's a 77,000 vote gain for Obama in Wake County alone. That's 18% of the 435,000 vote margin George W. Bush took the state by last time right there.
One other note:
We talked last week about the new age of ticket splitters- those voting Democratic for President and Republican for Governor rather than the traditional Republican for President and Democratic for Governor combo. Wake County exemplifies this new trend. There are almost twice as voters planning vote an Obama/McCrory ticket here as there are a McCain/Perdue one.
Full results here.
Perdue is faced with a "bad" problem. If she shows up for the debates, she drops in the polls because of a poor performance. If she does not show up for the debate, she drops in the polls because no one want a coward for governor considering the problems we are facing.
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