CBS Poll: Down To The Wire
White House Race Remains Deadlocked With One Day To Go
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Play CBS Video Video Countdown To Election Day President Bush and Senator Kerry battle in roughly 10 battleground states as Election Day nears. Byron Pitts and Thalia Assuras report.
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(AP / CBS)
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News Tools Electoral Vote Map State-by-state CBS News winner estimates, with background on past elections.
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Among all registered voters, the race is tied at 46 percent each.
CHOICE FOR PRESIDENT
(Likely voters)
Bush-Cheney
Now
Thursday-Saturday
Two weeks ago
Kerry-Edwards
Now
Thursday-Saturday
Two weeks ago
Nader-Camejo
Now
Thursday-Saturday
Two weeks ago
The national horserace does not appear to have been affected by the airing of the Osama bin Laden tape on Friday: in the interviews conducted over the weekend days Saturday and Sunday, presidential preference results are the same as for the entire four days reported here. There were, however, a slightly higher number of undecided voters in Sunday interviewing. Undecided voters were asked which candidate they leaned toward; with their answers included, the race is unchanged.
Independent candidate Ralph Nader was offered as a choice to voters only in states where he is on the ballot, and he draws just one percent of the vote.
Confidence in President Bush's ability to keep the nation safe from terrorism did drop somewhat in interviews conducted after the bin Laden tape aired. In surveys completed Thursday through Saturday 46 percent said they had a lot of confidence in Bush to protect the U.S. Interviews Saturday and Sunday showed that number at 39 percent.
CONFIDENT THAT HE WILL PROTECT COUNTRY FROM TERRORISM:
(Registered Voters)
KERRY
A lot
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
Some
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
Not much
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
None at all
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
BUSH
A lot
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
Some
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
Not much
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
None at all
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
CBS News will continue to poll through election eve and report those results on Tuesday’s Early Show.
QUALITIES AND ISSUES
The perception of President Bush having strong qualities of leadership also dipped a bit over the weekend. Interviews conducted through Saturday show 62 percent of voters say he is a strong leader. Interviews on Saturday and Sunday put the number at 58 percent. Kerry's ratings on this nudged up slightly in the same time period, narrowing the gap between the two to four points.
STRONG QUALITIES OF LEADERSHIP?
(Registered Voters)
Yes
Kerry
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
Bush
Sat-Sun
Thurs-Sat
There was no increase in the Saturday through Sunday period in voters' fear that terrorists might try to disrupt the Tuesday election. Few believe such an attack is very likely, similar to interviews conducted Thursday through Saturday.
This poll was conducted among a nationwide sample of 1345 adults, interviewed by telephone October 28-31, 2004, including 1194 registered voters.
824 registered voters were interviewed Thursday through Saturday and 700 interviewed Saturday and Sunday. The error due to sampling could be plus or minus three percentage points for registered voters and for the total sample. Each registered voter is assigned a probability of voting, which is used to calculate the likely voter results. The sum of these probabilities is the effective number of likely voters. The effective number of likely voters for the full sample is 939. The margin of error for the number of likely voters could be plus or minus three points.
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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