There is another new wrinkle in the topsy-turvy Alabama
Senate race. A new poll released over the weekend showed Democrat Doug Jones
with a three-point lead over embattled Republican Roy Moore.
The Washington
Post – Schar School poll found Jones with 50 percent support of 739 likely
voters to Moore’s 47 percent. The poll has a margin of error of 4.5 points
making the poll a statistical tie.
Two other polls that overlap the Post poll further confuse
the state of the race. A CBS/You
Gov poll released this morning found Moore with a six-point lead over Jones
and an Emerson
College poll gave Moore a three-point advantage.
The only recent poll that shows either candidate with a lead
outside the margin of error is the CBS poll, which found Moore with a 49-43
advantage over Jones. That poll sampled 766 likely voters and had a margin of
error of 4.8 percent.
The polling showed that voters are divided over the
allegations against Moore. The Post poll showed that 35 percent believe that
Moore harassed teenage girls while 37 percent are unsure or have no opinion.
Only 28 percent doubt the accusations. CBS reported that 92 percent of
Republicans don’t believe the accusations against Moore.
Only one poll, Emerson, asked voters about independent
candidate Lee Busby. Busby entered the race in mid-November as a
conservative alternative to Moore. The retired Marine polled at five percent
compared to 49 and 46 percent for Moore and Jones respectively.
Emerson is also the only poll of the three that has
regularly sampled the race. The record of polls on Real
Clear Politics shows that previous Emerson polls gave Moore 55 percent in
early November and 53 percent just after Thanksgiving. This shows a slight downward
trend for Moore and more women came forward and Jones
built an advantage in fundraising and advertising. Moore’s lead in the
Emerson polling has declined from 10 points in early November to his current three-point
advantage.
The small number of undecided voters may eventually break
for Doug Jones since Moore is much more well known in the state. An axiom of
polling developed by analyst Dick Morris
is that undecided voters favor the insurgent candidate. If the incumbent or better-known
candidate has not sealed the deal and is polling below 50 percent as the
election approaches, it often means that he will lose the election.
Polling is difficult in state and local races and the
different results almost certainly reflect different assumptions about what the
electorate will look like as well as the changing nature of the race. The
bottom line for the current crop of polls is that the race is too close to
call. Moore seems to hold a slight lead despite Jones’ advantage in the
Washington Post poll, but, with donations pouring in from around the country,
Jones is within striking distance.
With the race inside the margin of error in most polls, the
election could go either way. The final result will depend on which candidate
can best urge their voters to turn out and get to the polls.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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