[lbo-talk] ABC: debate a draw

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Sat Oct 9 09:13:33 PDT 2004


ABC NEWS POLL: THE SECOND PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE - 10/8/04 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Viewers Divide on Winner In Second Presidential Debate

The presidential contenders battled to a draw Friday night, with viewers of their second debate divided, largely along partisan lines, on who won. Among registered voters who watched the debate, 44 percent called John Kerry the winner, 41 percent said George W. Bush won and 13 percent called it a tie. That threepoint difference between Kerry and Bush is within the poll's margin of sampling error. It's a bit of a comedown for Kerry from the first debate, which viewers by a nine-point margin, 45-36 percent, said he won.

Second Presidential Debate Who won? Kerry 44% Bush 41% Tie 13%

About equal numbers of partisans tuned in - 35 percent of viewers were Democrats, 32 percent Republicans and 29 percent independents. And few minds were changed: Viewers divided in their vote preference by 50-47 percent between Kerry and Bush before the debate, and by an almost identical 50-48 percent after it. That's customarily the case in immediate post-debate polls; debates, at least in the first blush, tend more to reinforce viewers' pre-existing perceptions than to change them.

Vote Preference Among Viewers Before debate After debate Kerry 50% 50% Bush 47% 48% Nader <.5% <.5%

This poll was conducted only among registered voters who watched the debate, in order to measure their opinion of who won. Debate watchers are a different group from all registered or likely voters nationally.

PARTISANS - Among Kerry supporters, 85 percent said he won the debate; among Bush supporters, 84 percent said Bush won. Almost no one on either side gave the win to the candidate they oppose.

In terms of political allegiance, the 35-32 percent Democratic-Republican division among debate watchers was similar to the even 35-35 percent division among viewers of last week's first presidential debate. The audience for Tuesday night's vice presidential debate, by contrast, was a bit more Republican, 38-31 percent. Friday night, 77 percent of Democrats called Kerry the winner and an identical 77 percent of Republicans said Bush won. Independents divided by 44-34 percent between Kerry and Bush - within the margin of sampling error for the number of independents surveyed.

UP NEXT - So far none of the debates has resulted in as decisive a win as Bush scored in the second presidential debate in 2000, when viewers picked him over Al Gore as the winner by a 16-point margin, 46-30 percent, partly because that debate drew a more Republican audience. Bush and Gore essentially drew their first and third debates. Bush and Kerry meet for their third and final debate Wednesday in Tempe, Ariz.



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