Parsing the Polls: Is a Democratic Wave Building?
In a March Parsing the Polls we looked at the edge Democrats held over Republicans on a generic ballot question, which, in essence, asks: "If the congressional election were held today, would you vote for the Democratic candidate in your district or the Republican candidate?"
At the time, we decided that although Democrats' advantage signaled considerable unrest in the country toward the majority party in Washington, it was too early in the cycle to draw any broad conclusions about what the generic ballot numbers meant for the fall.
At the time, the average of the last five national polls testing the generic ballot showed Democrats with a 13.4 percent margin. Fast forward six months and that margin has actually increased. Take a look:
Organization | Survey Dates | GOP | Dem | Difference |
Newsweek | 8/10-11 | 39% | 51% | 12% |
Fox/Opinion Dynamics | 8/8-9 | 30 % | 48 % | 18% |
AP-Ipsos | 8/7-9 | 37% | 55% | 18% |
Post/ABC | 8/3-6 | 39% | 52% | 13% |
CNN | 8/2-3 | 40% | 53% | 13% |
Add those numbers up and the average Democratic generic edge has grown to 14.8 percent -- with 84 days left before the election.
So is now the time to conclude that a Democratic wave is building that will sweep Republicans out of a House majority in November?
The answer, according to Charlie Cook and Stu Rothenberg, is a guarded yes.
1 Comments:
I didn't see this until after I commented on your entry above. This is encouraging knowing that we're less than 3 months away. KEEP THAT TABLE!
I don't know what the MoE is for each of those crunchers, but I know its miniscule compared to the difference. And I know opinion can't change that much in that short of a period of time. I also know that we're polarized and the "fence sitters" are few this time around. The election results should reflect these numbers closely!
Thanks for posting this up E!!!
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