Pacific Standard Debut Cover

Rebounding into the Poll Position

 

Although the Sarah Palin selection has invigorated the news media covering the race for the presidency, the post-GOP convention bounce in the polls was average for major party confabs since 1964.

The Republicans gained 6 percentage points in the polls based on the Gallup number the Sunday before the convention and the Sunday after, according to the American Presidency Project (http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/index.php).

(Careful readers may recall we said the Democrats had the same percentage bounce of 6 points. That number has since been revised downward to 4 percent. While that stomps on John Kerry’s one percentage point drop in 2004, it’s still below average.)

Looking just at GOP bounces since 1964, the McCain-Palin spike is a percentage point above average. But more importantly in a close race, the GOP’s gain has put their ticket ahead overall, although non-Gallup surveys put the already close race at a tie.

And here’s a worthless statistic worthy of NFL commentary: Since 1964, GOP tickets with a 6-percent or greater bounce has always won, while among Democrats four bounces greater than 6 points (1980, 1984, 1988 and 2000) have ended with a loss in November.

That said, here at Miller-McCune.com we take our polls with a grain of salt, something encouraged by our contributor and veteran Chicago pol Don Rose.

About Michael Todd

Most of online editor Michael Todd's career has been spent in newspaper journalism, ranging from papers in the Marshall Islands to tiny California farming communities. Before joining Miller-McCune, he was managing editor of the national magazine Hispanic Business.