Sir_Galahad wrote:
1 - The above conundrum. I just don't believe that mainstream America is ready to elect far left liberal president.
2 - The fact that Obama show be way ahead in the polls, but isn't. This tells me that there are still a lot of undecideds out there considering.
3 - The Bradley Effect
4 - Kerry was ahead by 10-11 points at this point in 2004 and look what happened to him.
I think that if McCain shows just an ounce of leadership in the coming weeks, he will win.
The Bradley effect has been overstated. Most of the polls in California showed a race that was tightening dramatically over the last few days prior to the election and most had it as close to a dead heat, although with Bradley slightly ahead. So his loss was not due to "racism" but the fact that polls of necessity are indicators of past trends not present inclinations. If a poll is released election Monday, it usually shows the effects of interviews conducted Friday, Saturday and Sunday (or Saturday and Sunday). This still leaves a lot of time for people to change their minds, and a number of voters make up their minds in the last day or two (at least enough to make the difference in a close election).
Also, this election is different in a big way than any other one in United States history. The economic meltdown, which really started in most people's minds on September 15, is the most serious pre-election crisis in history. Before the Lehman/Merrill Lynch news, most people were unaware of how serious the crisis was. Within days, there was widespread fear of a complete economic meltdown. The US has had economic problems and been at war at election time before, but not anything that was nearly as severe and (in most people's minds) sudden as this one. The only thing comparable would have been if Pearl Harbor or 9/11 had occurred at a similar time before a Presidential election.
So analyses of just how and when various candidates got or lost leads in the past are a bit off point. In the Rasmussen daily tracking poll, McCain had his biggest lead, +3 on September 14 and it moved steadily to Obama after that, hitting a maximum of Obama +8 on October 6 and 7. It's now O +5. The other tracking polls all show the big movement to Obama beginning just about the same time.
If people do indeed begin to think that the immediate crisis (banks could be failing by the boatload and employers wouldn't be able to make payroll) is past and what lies ahead are more or less "ordinary" economic tough times, then they will be more amenable to putting the economic situation in proper perspective, an important, perhaps the most important, but not the only issue to be considered. If that is the case, voters will be amenable to listening to McCain and if he presents a credible case in this last debate, he has a chance.
That being said, I think he definitely has to win this debate in most people's minds, either by making a credible case on the economy and raising doubts about Obama's plans, or by raising doubts about Obama's unsavory connections. He can't let this debate turn into both candidates reciting their canned talking points.
Obama gave McCain some ammunition Monday with his "spread the wealth" comment in response to a voter question. That was an incredibly dumb thing to say from a political standpoint because it plays right into the Republican attempts to portray him as a wild Socialist. McCain and the Republicans should be hitting that comment every single chance they get.
The intensity of Obama's supporters' attacks in recent days and the constant recycling of the race card, most recently by John Lewis, who really disappointed me with his comments, shows that they don't think this election is in the bag. The recent results of early voting in Ohio, a target for Obama's vote early efforts, shows that his get out the vote efforts (as opposed to Acorn's "pay us for voter registration" efforts), were not as successful as many people thought they would be.
McCain is down but there is room for recovery, even more if there are some skeletons in the Obama closet they've been waiting to trot out.