Uncommitted Voters Pick Kerry
Give Dem Edge Over Bush 39%-25%; 36% Call It Draw In CBS Poll
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Play CBS Video Video Candidates Back To Work President Bush and Sen. John Kerry hit the campaign trail after their final debate, working to sway uncommitted votes in what's slated to be one of the closest elections ever, John Roberts reports.
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Video Controversy Follows Debate The presidential candidates fielded both personal and political questions in the final debate, and generated some controversy in the process, Jim Axelrod reports.
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Video Voters Give Kerry Nod Across the country over 200 uncommitted voters watched the presidential debate and participated in a high-tech CBS News poll. Anthony Mason reports many called it a draw.
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Before the third debate, 31 percent of uncommitted voters said Kerry had clear positions on the issues. That number went up to 59 percent after the shootout in Tempe. (AP)
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Among uncommitted voters, 54 percent came away from the debates with a better opinion of Kerry and 39 percent had a better opinion of Mr. Bush. Others said the dialogue made no difference. (CBS/AP)
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The number of uncommitted voters who said they think Bush has clear positions on the issues rose from 47 percent before the debate to 64 percent afterwards. (AP)
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Photo Essay Dueling For The White House The candidates square off on the issues.
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Interactive Campaign 2004 Complete election recap – winners/losers, money, issues and more.
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Photo Essay Great Debates Key moments and match-ups in past presidential debates.
Immediately after the debate, CBS News interviewed a nationally representative sample of more than 200 debate watchers assembled by Knowledge Networks who were "uncommitted voters" - voters who are either undecided about who to vote for or who have a preference but say they could still change their minds.
During the debate, women frequently registered more positive reactions to Kerry, and the final poll results also indicate that. Men and women uncommitted voters each saw a different winner in tonight's debate. Half of women named Kerry the winner while men divided evenly – Mr. Bush 32 percent, Kerry 29 percent.
These uncommitted voters said the debates had helped them decide whom to vote for this year.
HAVE THE DEBATES HELPED YOU MAKE UP YOUR MIND?
(Uncommitted Voters Who Watched Debate)
Yes
No
While they came away from the final debate believing that both candidates had clear positions on the issues, for Kerry, those evaluations improved more dramatically. The percentage that thought he had clear positions almost doubled during the debate: beforehand, among these same respondents, just 31 percent said Kerry had clear positions on the issues, afterwards 59 percent did. Mr. Bush improved as well. After the debate, 64 percent said he had clear positions on the issues. 47 percent had thought so beforehand.
After the debate these voters overwhelmingly thought John Kerry cares about them and would protect Social Security. They were more mixed on whether Mr. Bush cares about people like them, although most said he did.
Seven in 10 uncommitted women voters who watched Wednesday said Kerry shares their priorities for the country. Men were evenly divided.
Both candidates gained in overall favorability, Kerry more than Mr. Bush. A majority of uncommitted voters came away from the third debate with more overall positive evaluations of Kerry. Four in 10 also came away with more positive views of Mr. Bush.
THE DEBATE'S EFFECT ON OPINIONS OF THE CANDIDATES
(Uncommitted Voters Who Watched Debate)
Better
Kerry
Bush
Worse
Kerry
Bush
No Change
Kerry
Bush
There were gender differences here, too. Forty-eight percent of male uncommitted voters said their opinion of Mr. Bush improved after the debate. Fifty-one percent of uncommitted women voters said their opinion of Mr. Bush didn't change. Kerry's image improved among both men and women.
Uncommitted voters in this poll graded the candidates with a sliding scale using their remote controls during the debate. In the real-time evaluations of tonight's debate:
This CBS News poll was conducted online by Knowledge Networks among a nationwide random sample of 211 uncommitted voters - voters who don't yet know who they will vote for, or who have chosen a candidate but may still change their minds - who have agreed to watch the debate. Knowledge Networks, a Silicon Valley company, conducted the poll among a sample of adult members of its household panel, a nationally representative sample given access to the Internet via Web TV. The questions were administered using the Internet.
This is a scientifically representative poll of undecided voters' reaction to the presidential debate. The margin of sampling error could be plus or minus 7 percentage points for results based on the entire sample.
For detailed information on how CBS News conducts public opinion surveys, click here. For information on how we define "likely voters," click here.
©MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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