The Hill Poll Week 3

District by district – Mississippi

MISSISSIPPI-01

Blue Dog Democrat behind in GOP-leaning district

Blue Dog Democratic Rep. Travis Childers (Miss.) is in a tight race,
trailing his Republican challenger by five points, 39 percent to 44,
with 12 percent of likely voters undecided, according to The Hill 2010
Midterm Election Poll.

{mosads}Childers’s party ties could hurt him in this district John McCain
won by 24 points in 2008. Only 35 percent approve of the job President
Obama is doing, while 63 percent disapprove. And 71 percent said the
president will be an important factor when they go to the ballot box.

Plus,
59 percent of voters said the Democratic leadership in Congress was to
the left of them, and only 21 percent described the leadership as
“about where you are.”

Childers seems to acknowledge that reality. In a recent campaign ad,
he notes he voted against Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) 267 times. He
also voted against healthcare reform legislation.

Meanwhile, 39 percent of voters couldn’t come up with a compelling reason to vote for Democrats in November.

Republican Alan Nunnelee is winning independent voters with 48
percent of their support. He is also winning male voters and older
voters. Childers leads among women and younger voters.

Childers first won the seat in a special election, after Roger
Wicker was appointed to the Senate. Childers won reelection easily in
2008 — by 10 points.

Party spending has been heavy in this race.

The NRCC has spent about $667,000 in independent expenditures, while the DCCC has spent around $505,000.

The Hill poll was conducted by Penn Schoen Berland Oct. 9-17. The
survey consisted of 603 phone interviews among likely voters and has a
margin of error of plus or minus 4 percent.

The Hill 2010 Midterm
Election Poll Stories WEEK 3

Majority says no “change” under Obama, or change for the worse

Media has gotten more partisan, likely voters say in poll

Democrats twice as likely as GOPers to consider their party too extreme

Pelosi ‘majority makers’ are facing electoral peril
Only 1-in-4 see American Dream as still there for all
Voters are not worried about ‘extreme’ label on candidates
District by district
Data: The numbers the stories are based on
Editorial: Election tides

District by
district results

Arizona
Illinois
Mississippi
New Hampshire
New York
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin

The Hill 2010 Midterm
Election Poll Stories WEEK 2

Voters more likely to see Dems as dominated by extremists
Independents prefer cutting the deficit to spending on jobs
Democrats have edge on question of extending Bush tax cuts
Republicans are up in 8 of 10 open House seats
After forty Dem years, Obey’s seat in jeopardy
Majority of voters say they want a viable third party
District by district
Data: The numbers the stories are based on
Editorial: The results so far

District by

district results

Arkansas
Illinois
West Virginia
Hawaii
New Hampshire

Pennsylvania
Michigan

Tennessee
Washington

The Hill/ANGA 2010 Midterm
Election Poll Stories WEEK 1

Voters: Nancy Pelosi did not drain swamp
Tea Party is firing up the Democrats
Republican voters more ‘passionate’ about voting in the midterm election

About the poll

GOP leads widely, Dems in danger but races tight

Feelings about Obama make midterms a national election

Independents prefer divided government, lean Republican

Distaste for healthcare law crosses party lines
Editorial: Knowing who will win

District by
district results

Arizona
Colorado
Illinois
Maryland
Michigan
Nevada
New Mexico
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Virginia