On the eve of the first Presidential Debate, Barack Obama is perhaps in
as strong a position in the polls as he has been all year, now
projecting to win the election 74.7 percent of the time. Both the state
and the national polls that have come out within the past 48 hours have
generally been quite favorable to Obama, and suggest that he may gained
an additional point or so above and beyond his "Lehman Leap" from last
week.
Still, there are a couple of silver linings for McCain in the state polling:
Wait, which silver linings?
Well, McCain gets good numbers in West Virginia and Montana, two states
that looked like they might just have been on the verge of being
competitive. And although Obama looks as though he's slightly ahead in
New Hampshire, it also looks to be polling behind
his national numbers -- we project Obama to win New Hampshire by 0.7
points, but the national popular vote by 2.9 points. So if the race
tightens up, Obama may no longer be able to bank on New Hampshire's 4
electoral votes.
Still, McCain has very serious problems in
Virginia, and extremely serious problems in Michigan, which is starting
to drift off the swing state list. And forget about the Pacific
Northwest. But at this stage, the electoral math is starting to
diminish in importance; McCain needs to make gains everywhere, which
means he needs a clutch performance in tonight's debate.
--Nate Silver