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Barack and Michelle Obama hug after his speech to a crowd in a Miami park
Tender touch: Barack and Michelle Obama hug after his speech to a crowd in a Miami park

Obama 'heads for landslide'

Paul Thompson in Miami
23 Oct 2008


Barack Obama has opened up a commanding lead of as much as 14 points over John McCain in the closing stages of the race for the White House, latest polls show today.

As the Republican candidate's campaign appeared to falter, one poll showed the popularity gap between Mr Obama and Mr McCain has doubled from seven per cent earlier this month to 14 per cent. The Pew Research Centre's latest poll found Mr Obama's support had grown to 52 per cent of voters against 38 per cent for his rival.

Today's Reuters/C-SPAN/Zogby poll shows that Mr Obama's lead has grown to 12 points with crucial independent and women voters increasingly moving to his side. Pollsters are beginning to talk about a landslide win for Mr Obama.

With less than two weeks before the 4 November election, Mr Obama leads Mr McCain 52 per cent to 40 per cent among probable voters in the latest three-day tracking poll, which has a margin of error of 2.9 points. Mr Obama has made steady gains over the last four days and has tripled his lead on Mr McCain in the past week.

"Obama's expansion is really across the board," pollster John Zogby said. "It seems to be among almost every demographic group."

The Illinois senator saw his lead among women, who are expected to play a decisive role in this election, increase to 18 points from 16 yesterday.

Independent voters, who have been the target of intense campaign efforts by both sides, have now swung behind Mr Obama by a 30-point margin, 59 per cent to 29 per cent.

Mr McCain continued to attack his rival over his lack of foreign policy experience. He said it would make Mr Obama vulnerable to a terror attack in the first months of his presidency as terrorists would seek to test his administration within the first six months.

His comments were seen as an attempt to switch the focus of the election back to national security issues and away from the ailing economy.

Speaking on CNN last night, Mr McCain said: "He was wrong about the surge in Iraq. He still fails to acknowledge that he was wrong. He was wrong when he said Georgia should show restraint. So I can understand why the American people might be concerned." Of al Qaeda, he added: "The thing that probably may encourage them a little is that Senator Obama has been wrong."  

Mr McCain had hoped to use his foreign policy experience to his advantage during the final weeks of the election campaign. But the financial crisis on Wall Street has completely overshadowed every topic in the election campaign.

Reader views (7)

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America is so lucky to have Barack Obama look at what is happening in Australia, Rudd has to be the worst person this country has had. Barack Obama is young and smart and will make a great president. Lets face it John McCain is past his used by date weather you like him or not. He made a huge mistake with Sarah Palin what was he thinking of doesn't that speak volumes about the man.

- Katie Knott (O.Connell), Gold Coast, Australia., 24/10/2008 05:18
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The land slide is a joke. The truth is McCain will win by a large margin. The media lets you know what they want you to hear. McCain and only McCain can and will do the job. He is the change we need to keep this country going. God bless him and Palin. Polls are a joke.

- Ed Stanton, Charles Town, WV., 24/10/2008 04:25
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In 1980, the press was SHOCKED when Regan won over Carter. The press HATED Regan then. He was nothing more than a cheap actor from "Bedtime with Bozo." They joked about how his co-star was a monkey.

When Regan won, the press coined the phase the "silent majority" to explain away their polling failure.

McCain's poll numbers are probably better than Regan were.

- Anne, Westchester, NY USA., 24/10/2008 00:10
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US needs change, and they need it now.

- K.Todua, Aldershot, Hampshire, UK., 23/10/2008 18:35
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The media are being irresponsible talking about 'landslides'. We don't mind if Obama wins by a small margin, as long as he wins. Isn't it about time that Electoral Commissions worldwide put a freeze on all opinion polls; I'm sure a 'scrambler' type mechanism can be built into all opinion polls two weeks prior to actual polling. That way the voice of the people will be more accurate.

- Dhanraj, Basildon, 23/10/2008 16:24
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Notice how the liberal media have supported Mr Obama from the get go, first against Clinto and now against McCain, this man can't do no wrong in their eyes. I like Obama but there has been some serious bias in the way this capaign has been reported.

- Brandon Thomas, London UK, 23/10/2008 13:20
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It was Obama's VP candidate, Joe Biden, who first stated that Obama would be tested by a terrorist attack early in his Presidency. Results of the election will depend on registered voters ACTUALLY going to the polls. The US has a long history of not turning out to vote. Either candidate will need to be the best we have ever elected to help solve this global crisis!

- Tucker Gustafson, Jr., Los Angeles, CA USA, 23/10/2008 12:46
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