MarginOfError

Latest presidential numbers

Is it a fluke? That one time in 20 when poll results are outside the margin of error?

The Gallup organization reports that Illinois Sen. Barack Obama has pulled even with presumed front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York for the Democratic presidential nomination. Gallup this week estimates Obama's support at 30 percent to Clinton's at 29 percent.

Wash before you eat that!

It's pretty easy to ask polling questions that highlight some fundamental differences between men and women. The latest poll by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University found that people generally embrace their sexual stereotypes.

People on the margins believe in conspiracies

Among the significant trends in the latest study of anti-government anger by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University is that racial and ethnic minorities are especially likely to suspect federal involvement in the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

A survey of 1,010 adult residents of the United States conducted by telephone last month found that 67 percent of black Americans believe it is "somewhat likely" or "very likely" that "people in the federal goverment" in some way assisted in the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Only 29 percent of whites believe this. Among Hispanics, about 46 percent belief in federal involvement.

Conspiracy theories

A significant percentage of Americans are giving at least some credence to conspiracy theories that the federal government either deliberately allowed or even participated in the 9/11 attacks so that it could go to war in the Middle East. This, boiled down, has been the message of hundreds of conspiracy Internet sites in the United States and around the world.

The Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University has studied public anger at government and, from time to time, conspiracy theories for 12 years. The current level of anti-government feelings, spurred largely by unhappiness with the U.S. military action in Iraq, is at the highest level monitored so far.

Micro or Macro

Rarely have experts been more divided than the handicappers for the 2006 elections that will determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Folks like Prof. Larry Sabato at the University of Virginia and Charlie Cook, who publishes a popular Washington political newsletter, agree that it's unlikely the Democrats can pick up the 15 seats they need to gain control of the House, based upon their exhaustive district-by-district reviews. This represents a micro-analysis of the race.

Hostility to gays declines a little

The Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C., has tracked a significant downtick in anti-gay sentiment, although a majority of Americans still oppose the notion of gay marriage.

The latest poll, based on interviews with 1,405 adults contacted March 8-12, found that 51 percent oppose legalization of same-sex marriage while 39 percent opposed it. Two years ago, when many Amerians were shocked by news footage of gay marriages in San Francisco and parts of New England, the mood was 63 percent opposed and 30 percent in favor of legally recognized gay unions.

Gender Gap Is Back

Just 30 percent of women approve of President Bush's performance in office, compared to 44 percent of men. That's the trend in our latest poll of 1,007 adults conducted by the Scripps Survey Research Center at Ohio University.

The gender gap is back.

About 3 million women who voted for Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election changed political direction in 2004 to support the re-election of George W. Bush. The reasons, of course, were security concerns in the post-9/11 world.

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