Imagine A Great Election

Candidates' Views for the Concerned Voter

Home

Mission Statement

Your Guides

2009 ELECTIONS RESULTS

Gubernatorial VA NJ

New York's 23rd District

2010 MID-TERM ELECTIONS

U.S. Senate: CO

Michael Bennett (D)

Andrew Romanoff (D)

Gubernatorial: CO

OBAMA CABINET & KEY STAFF

Secretary of State

Secretary of Treasury

Secretary of Defense

Attorney General

Secretary of Interior

Secretary of Agriculture

Secretary of Commerce

Secretary of Labor

Secretary Health Hum Serv

Secretary of HUD

Transportation Secretary

Energy Secretary

Secretary of Education

Sec Veterans Affairs

Sec Dept Homeland Sec

Chief of Staff

National Security Advisor

Dir Natl Economic Council

Chair Council Ec Advisors

EPA Administrator

Dir Office Mgt & Budget

Trade Representative

UN Representative

Dir Dom Policy Council

Dir Off Sci & Tech Policy

ADDITIONAL OBAMA APPTS.

Senior Advisors

Chair SEC

Chair CFTC

Chair Economic Rec Adv Bd

SBA Administrator

Dir National Intelligence

Director CIA

Chief Performance Officer

Political Director

Asst Legislative Affairs

Press Secretary

Dir Office Health Reform

Chair Council Env Quality

Ast Energy Climate Change

Dir Intergov Affairs

Director Communications

Staff Secretary

Cabinet Secretary

White House Counsel

Director NOAA

Dir Off Natl Drug Control

Surgeon General

Chief Technology Officer

Director FEMA

Commissioner FDA

ADDITIONAL OBAMA STAFF

Treasury Department

Deputy Chiefs of Staff

Dep Dir Off Mgt Budget

Dep Dir Domestic Policy

Dep Dir Health Care Ref

Dep Asst Energy Climate

Dep Dir Communications

Deputy Staff Secretary

OBAMA TRANSITION TEAM

Essays on Obama

My Mixed-Race Family

APPOINTMENTS vs ELECTIONS

Senate Appointments

IN OUR OPINION

CO U.S. Senate Seat

CO Secretary of State

Keating Economics

Beyond Spin

CALL TO ACTION

U.S. Media Outlets

Candidates' Websites

FINANCIAL CRISIS

Credit Card Crunch

Global Recession

Alan Greenspan Testimony

On the Campaign Trail

Candidates on the Economy

Beyond the Bailout

Blame for the Bailout

Bailout

Financial Meltdown

More on the Meltdown

More on the Meltdown II

Keating 5 History

Home Page Archives

11/09 Big Money Politics

03/09 Review & Preview

02/09 Obama Inner Circle

01/09 MLK & Transition

01/09 More Appointments

12/08 CO Appointments

12/08 Election Not Over

11/08 Post-Election

11/08 Election Results

10/08 Electoral Impact

10/08 Regulating Wall St.

CAMPAIGN POSITIONS

Finance Reform

Homeownership

Taxes

Energy: Obama

Energy: McCain

Nat'l Security: McCain

Nat'l Security: Obama

Foreign Policy/Iraq

Health Care

Candidates' Health Plans

Trade

Education

Government Ethics

Social Security

The Environment

Reproductive Rights

Immigration

POLLS AND RESULTS

The Impact of Racism

Polls and Cell Phones

Stop Voter Repression

Demanding Diligence

YES to the Debate!

Full Disclosure Now!

Electoral Votes Tracking

'04 Projections & Results

2008 Projections

Our Projections

Polls Nov. 2008

Obama in Ohio

Polls Oct. 2008

Polls Mid-Oct. 2008

Polls Early Oct. 2008

Polls Late Sep. 2008

Missouri

Alaska Senate Race

Minnesota Senate Race

Georgia Senate Race

Nebraska

THE CANDIDATES

About the Pres Candidates

Presidential Disclosures

About the VP Candidates

VP Disclosures

2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: PROJECTIONS

Daily Presidential Tracking Poll
Rasmussen Reports, Monday, November 3, 2008

“On Monday, the final full day of campaigning for Election 2008, the Rasmussen Reports Daily Presidential Tracking Poll shows:

• Barack Obama with 52% of the vote.

• John McCain six points back at 46%.”

It is important to note this finding from Rasmussen Reports does not exist in a vacuum. Obama’s support has been between 50-52% for 39 straight days. For most of those days, McCain has been in the narrow range of 44-46%. 

If the day-before-the-election Rasmussen Report projections (see table below) hold true as they did in 2004:

Obama will win:
260 likely and safe 
26 leans Dem
5  tossups                  

Obama Total   291

McCain will win:
160 likely and safe 
0 leans Rep
56 tossups                

McCain Total   216                                                                                               

The overall total 538 electoral votes is reached when Missouri’s 11 votes and Ohio’s 20 votes (noted as ties below) are added to the Obama and McCain likely totals.  Based on the Rasmussen model, Barack Obama would win the election with 291 electoral votes even if both Ohio and Missouri go for McCain, giving him a total of 247 electoral votes, 23 electoral votes shy of the required 270.


Rasmussen Report 2008 ELECTION PROJECTIONS


Safe 
GOP

(65)


Likely
GOP
(95)


Leans
GOP
(0)


Toss
Up
(92)


Leans
Dem
(26)


Likely
Dem
(114)


Safe
Dem
(146)

AK (3)

AR (6)

 

FL (27)

McCain 50

Obama 49

CO (9)

Obama 51

McCain 47

CT (7)

CA (55)


AL (9)


AZ (10)*

McCain 51

Obama 46

 


IN (11)

McCain 49

Obama 46


NH (4)

Obama 51

McCain 44


IA (7)


DE (3)


ID (4)


GA (15)

 


MO (11)

tie

49-49


VA (13)

Obama 51

McCain 47


ME (4)


DC (3)


KS (6)


MS (6)

 


MT (3)

McCain 50

Obama 46

 


MI (17)


HI (4)


KY (8)


NE (5)

 


NC (15)

MCain 50

Obama 49

 


MN (10)


IL (21)


LA (9)


ND (3)

 


NV (5)

Obama 50

Mccain 46

 


NJ (15)


MD (10)


OK (7)


SC (8)

 


OH (20)

tie

49-49

 


NM (5)


MA (12)


TN (11)


SD (3)

 

 

 


OR (7)


NY (31)


UT (5)


TX (34)

 

 

 


PA (21)*

Obama 52

McCain 46


RI (4)


WY (3)


WV (5)

 

 

 


WA (11)


VT (3)

 

 

 

 

 


WI (10)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*The margins in the categories of safe and likely for each candidate will not be specified except for Arizona and Pennsylvania because of the campaigns' and media attention.