Obama leads; polls show
it's uphill for McCain
By
Arun Kumar
Indo-Asian
News Service
Washington,
Oct 28 (IANS) Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama
is hanging onto leads in several battleground states as well
as a handful of traditionally Republican states won by President
George Bush in 2004, according to several new polls.
Obama
holds narrow leads in Ohio, Missouri, Florida, Nevada and
Virginia, while rival Republican John McCain is hanging onto
his lead in Indiana and West Virginia, according to CNN's
average of a string of polls in these states.
That
latest round of poll results shows McCain faces an uphill
climb in the final week of his presidential campaign, CNN
said.
In
Ohio, the state no Republican has won the White House without,
Obama is holding a 4 point lead, 50 percent to 46 percent.
That's one point narrower than a CNN Ohio polls of polls last
week.
In
Missouri, the state that voted for Bush twice, Obama holds
a 1 point lead over McCain. A CNN average of recent polls
last week showed the race tied in Missouri.
Obama is holding onto a 2 point lead in Florida meanwhile,
48 percent to 46 percent.
That's
one point narrower than the race was last week at this time.
In Nevada, Obama has a 4 point lead, 49 to 45 percent - a
lead that hasn't changed over the last week.
In
Virginia, a state that hasn't voted Democratic in over 4 decades,
but one that has been increasingly trending Democratic, Obama
holds a 5 point lead, 50 to 45 percent. That's 3 points narrower
than Obama's lead there last week, according to a CNN poll
of polls then.
McCain
meanwhile has a 1 point lead in Indiana, 47 to 45 percent,
another state that hasn't voted Democratic since the 1960's
but one that the Obama campaign has heavily targeted.
McCain
also has an 8 point lead in West Virginia, 50 to 42 percent,
a lead that is 6 points higher than it was this time last
week.
"The
Republicans haven't lost Virginia in 44 years. They absolutely
need Florida to reach 270 electoral votes on Election Night.
They've never won the White House without carrying Ohio. And
the last time Missouri backed a losing candidate was in 1956,"
noted CNN Senior Political Researcher Alan Silverleib.
"McCain
is now trailing - albeit narrowly - in all four of these states.
He needs a dramatic turnaround this week to have a serious
shot at winning on November 4."
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