|
ith a week to go, George
W. Bush holds a slight lead over Al Gore in six polls. Here are the latest
results, in percentages:
CNN/USA Today/Gallup: Bush 49, Gore 42
Newsweek: Bush 45, Gore 42
Rasmussen: Bush 47, Gore 41
Reuters/MSNBC (Zogby): Bush 45, Gore 42
Voter.com Battleground: Bush 43, Gore 40
Washington Post/ABC: Bush 47, Gore 46
Of course, it's the electoral-college map that counts. Most media organizations
give Bush an edge here, too, but the race remains close and only one has
either candidate hitting the magic number of 270.
ABC: Bush 209, Gore 171
CBS: Bush 205, Gore 205
CNN: Bush 209, Gore 175
Evans & Novak: Bush 318, Gore 220
Fox News: Bush 246, Gore 209
The Hotline: Gore 241, Bush 234
NBC News: Bush 209, Gore 175
Rasmussen: Bush 220, Gore 168
USA Today: Bush 167, Gore 131
Ready or Not
Gore won't dare call Bush inexperienced his false assertion in
the first presidential debate that he had never done such a thing makes
it impossible for him to return to the theme now. But he can send out
his top surrogates: his wife and his running mate. At a rally in Michigan
on Sunday, Tipper Gore said, "What you need to do is figure out who you're
going to vote for for president, and I know that you're going to weigh
experience. That's important." It was a gentle scold, to be sure. She
didn't even mention Bush by name. Yet the New York Times made it
the lead story in today's paper "Gore Team Renews Criticism of
Bush as Inexperienced" perhaps because Joe Lieberman was slightly
more direct on This Week: "I don't think Gov. Bush is ready
based on his experience
to be the kind of president the American
people need at this point in our history." (The Times itself leaned
heavily on this argument in its endorsement of Gore yesterday. Gore has
been "face to face" with world leaders, it said. Funny, we don't recall
that argument carrying much weight with the Times in 1992.)
If this is a real Gore campaign tactic, it's great news for Bush: Most
people think he is qualified to be president, and assertions to the contrary
won't fall on receptive ears. The only thing better than Gore trotting
out his wife to level the charge would be Gore doing it himself
or better yet, Bill Clinton. Lieberman ought to be careful, too. A recent
NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that 49 percent considered
Dick Cheney more qualified to be president than Lieberman, with only 26
percent thinking the reverse.
|