A recent poll has Obama and Romney tied among women. Another gives Obama a 33 point edge.
Younger voters are starting to become as cynical as the rest of us.
With sixteen days to go, the race for President is tied.
Once again, it seems necessary to debunk some commonly believed myths about polling.
Once again, the Obama campaign appears to have an advantage among people who have voted already or will be voting before Election Day.
Mitt Romney continues to benefit from the first Presidential Debate, but will that last past the second debate?
The Presidential race seems to be returning to the state it was in before the political conventions.
Romney’s post-debate surge is being picked up in swing state polls, but will it be enough?
One pollster has called three battleground states 27 days early.
For the first time all cycle, Mitt Romney leads Barack Obama in the RealClearPolitics average.
Mitt Romney has gotten a bump in the polls from Wednesday debate, but it’s still too early to say if it means anything.
For no apparent reason, the presidential race is tightening ahead of tonight’s first debate, according to two reputable national polls.
The biggest surprise of the Presidential race to date is the fact that Mitt Romney has lost the edge he once had on economic issues.
The response rates for opinion polling of all types has become incredibly low.
The arguments of the people claiming that every single poll showing Mitt Romney is unfairly biased do not stand up to scrutiny.
Many on the right are heavily invested in the argument that current polling is intentionally biased against Mitt Romney. Their argument is not very plausible.
Public distrust of the media is at an all-time high. It’s easy to see why.
In order to win, Mitt Romney needs the support of a large segment of the 47% of the populace he wrote off back in May.
The President’s poll lead has shrunk, but there are still signs of trouble for Mitt Romney.