Opinion: Alabamians favor John McCain, but don’t see him winning
- Share via
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
No surprise here: A recent poll found John McCain comfortably ahead of Barack Obama in the battle for Alabama’s 9 electoral votes, 47% to 34%. Any hint of a closer race would be a shock in a state that President Bush carried with almost 63% of the vote four years ago.
What was surprising were the results for a second question posed by the Capital Survey Research Center.
When the pollsters asked 571 Alabamians whom they expected to win the White House race nationwide, 44% picked Obama, 33% McCain, with 23% undecided (the survey’s margin of error was plus or minus 4.1 percentage points).
Obama and his campaign periodically have been zinged by some observers -- and a lot of critics -- for acting as if a November victory was a foregone conclusion. Just recently, late-night talk show host David Letterman rolled out ‘Top Ten Signs Barack Obama is Overconfident,’ a list that included ‘Asked guy at Staples, ‘Which chair will work best in an oval-shaped office?’ ‘ and ‘Having head measured for Mt. Rushmore.’
Still, when even a plurality of Alabamians envisions an Obama administration, it must be tough for him not to feel good about his chances.
-- Don Frederick