----------------------- Yep; the one in my pants! Bingo! I don't follow politics. So is it official that a 1/2 negro 1/2 pacific islander superfly communist muslim is going up against some super-wealthy old white guy who wears magic underwear and believes that a supernatural human magically re-appeared in Latin America in the ancient past and that modern men and women should worship this mystic/deity? Um; is this an urban legend? I don't watch t.v. nor follow media. This seems preposterous, no? peace hedvig
that sums it up some what, but which party is in power does matter.. regardless of who cares or doesn't.. seriously dude it just does. These are the people that create laws and they can (and have) done a lot of damage to the nation.
I wonder if he also knows that obamacare is going to cost existing hc policy holders more $$$. I am certain that you understand that by now, but it isn't stopping you from saying otherwise.. why is that?
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Tuesday shows Mitt Romney attracting 47% of the vote, while President Obama earns 44%. Four percent (4%) prefer some other candidate, and five percent (5%) are undecided. Last week, the president received an immediate bounce following the Supreme Court ruling on his health care law. On the night of the ruling, the single night poll results were by far the best recorded for Obama in many months. Over the past few days, the numbers have returned to where theyâve been for most of the past monthâRomney up slightly among likely voters in a very close race. See tracking history. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/pub...ministration/daily_presidential_tracking_poll
Note this from yesterday http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytime...rate-quinnipiac-surveyusa-performed-strongly/ Rasmussen Polls Were Biased and Inaccurate Every election cycle has its winners and losers: not just the among the candidates, but also the pollsters. On Tuesday, polls conducted by the firm Rasmussen Reports â which released more than 100 surveys in the final three weeks of the campaign, including some commissioned under a subsidiary on behalf of Fox News â badly missed the margin in many states, and also exhibited a considerable bias toward Republican candidates. The 105 polls released in Senate and gubernatorial races by Rasmussen Reports and its subsidiary, Pulse Opinion Research, missed the final margin between the candidates by 5.8 points, a considerably higher figure than that achieved by most other pollsters. Some 13 of its polls missed by 10 or more points, including one in the Hawaii Senate race that missed the final margin between the candidates by 40 points, the largest error ever recorded in a general election in FiveThirtyEightâs database, which includes all polls conducted since 1998.
Rasmuessen Pres poll was tied for first most accurate in last election. Almost all your polls have 7 to 11 percent extra dems in their sample.