Rasmussen: Obama Has 23% Lead In North Carolina
By Justin Gardner | Related entries in 2008 Election, Barack, Democrats, Hillary, North Carolina, Polls
After Bill Clinton’s recent concession that Hill has to win N.C., much more focus will be on the Tar Heel State. And this latest poll backs up the trend.
In North Carolina, Barack Obama has opened up a twenty-three percentage point lead over Hillary Clinton. The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds that Obama attracts 56% of the vote while Clinton earns 33%. A month ago, Obama’s lead was just seven percentage points.While the absolute numbers are different, the trend is similar to results from Pennsylvania where Obama gained ten-points on Clinton during the month of March.
However, cause for concern for Obama?
Perhaps the only disturbing news for Obama in the survey is that most Clinton voters (56%) say they are not likely to vote for the Illinois Senator in the general election against John McCain. A month ago, 45% of Clinton voters said they were not likely to vote for Obama against McCain.
Yes, there will be plenty of time to mend fences with these voters after the primary contest is over, but he can’t like how divisive this contest is getting.
Other recent posts about North Carolina:
- Poll: Obama Up By Nearly 20 In North Carolina
- Poll: Obama Up 15 In North Carolina
- Poll: Obama Up Big In North Carolina, Race Speech Helping?
More as it develops…
This entry was posted on Saturday, April 5th, 2008 and is filed under 2008 Election, Barack, Democrats, Hillary, North Carolina, Polls. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.









April 6th, 2008 at 4:19 am
This sort of thing makes me wonder how much to trust these polling people. Surely we can assume that Obama’s increased support comes only from those who are likely to vote for him. A month ago, 40% would have voted for Clinton; now, 33% would. 45% of 40%, a month ago, is 18%. 56% of 33%, today, is 18.4%: practically the same. Perhaps the fact that it’s stationary is cause for some concern, but it’s hardly surprising.
If the people at Rasmussen don’t understand that, what else have they messed up?