John McCain is now trusted
more than Barack Obama on nine out of 14
electoral issues tracked by Rasmussen Reports.
The latest national telephone surveys find that
McCain has the biggest advantage on the war in
Iraq, by a 51% to 39% margin.
Perhaps the most interesting
finding of these polls is that McCain has
expanded his leads on nearly every issue he had
previously had the advantage on, while Obama’s
leads have diminished over the past two weeks.
The Rasmussen Reports
daily Presidential Tracking Poll shows the
race for the White House is very close. The
results are consistent with results from the
past couple of weeks showing a race that is
essentially even as the convention season
approaches (see
recent daily results).
In the new survey, McCain has
tripled his lead on the topic of immigration. He
now has a 45% to 36% advantage over his
Democratic opponent, up from a three-point lead
two weeks ago.
The Republican also has
pulled ahead on the issue of balancing the
federal budget. Two weeks ago, the candidates
were tied on this issue at 40%. McCain now has a
43% to 40% lead on the issue among voters.
McCain used to be behind on
the issue of Social Security but has pulled
ahead of Obama for a 44% to 38% lead.
On issues that Obama has
previously enjoyed huge advantages, such as
health care and education, his leads have
decreased. On health care, Obama leads 46% to
41%, down from a 12 percentage-point lead just
two weeks ago. On education, Obama leads 43% to
39%, down from a 10-point lead two weeks ago. On
environmental issues, Obama’s advantage over
McCain has gone from 14 percentage points down
to eight this week.
The economy is the top issue
for the majority of voters this election season.
Voters have consistently trusted the Democratic
Party more on this issue, but the two
presidential candidates are tied at 45% as to
who voters trust more. A
week prior, Obama had a statistically
insignificant one percentage point lead on the
issue.
On national security, an
issue that McCain consistently performs well on,
the Republican leads 52% to 40%. His lead
represents an improvement from the eight-point
lead he held the week before.
A poll released this week
finds that
over half of voters support Obama’s proposal to
provide working families with energy credits
but aren’t sure about his idea of taxing big oil
companies. When asked who voters trust more when
it comes to energy issues, voters choose McCain
by a 46% to 42% margin.
When it comes to government
ethics and corruption, Obama has a 46% to 44%
advantage. A
separate survey finds that the Democratic Party
is trusted more on this issue by a 40% to 29%
margin.
See survey questions and
toplines. Crosstabs for Obama/McCain Trust
on
Issues I and
Issues II available for
Premium Members only.
Rasmussen Reports is an
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public opinion polling information.
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2008 offers the most comprehensive public
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Presidential election.
Scott Rasmussen, president of
Rasmussen Reports, has been an independent
pollster for more than a decade.