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Post by west-texan on Aug 6, 2008 20:19:06 GMT -5
;D Amercians tell Obama to .news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080806/ap_on_el_pr/poll_obama_overexposure;_ylt=Atog3EbG4OWDPl7yX9fBZ26s0NUEPoll: Nearly half hearing too much about Obama Wed Aug 6, 10:47 AM ET WASHINGTON - Barack Obama may be the fresh face in this year's presidential election, but nearly half say they're already tired of hearing about him, a poll says. With Election Day still three months away, 48 percent said they're hearing too much about the Democratic candidate, according to a poll released Wednesday by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center. Just 26 percent said the same about his Republican rival, John McCain. Obama, the 47-year-old Illinois senator who would become the first black president, has dominated political news coverage much of the year. According to an ongoing Pew study, Obama has appeared in more news stories this year and more people say they have heard more about him than McCain, the longtime Arizona senator who also ran for president in 2000. Two-thirds of Republicans and about half of independents said they've heard too much about Obama, as did a third of Democrats, a significant number. At the same time, nearly four in 10 said they've been hearing too little about McCain — about four times the number who said so about Obama. About half of Republicans, four in 10 independents and even a quarter of Democrats said they've not heard enough about the GOP candidate.The poll was conducted from Aug. 1-4 and involved telephone interviews with 1,004 adults. It had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. On the Web: Pew Research Center: people-press.org
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Post by west-texan on Aug 6, 2008 20:32:08 GMT -5
news.yahoo.com/s/usnews/20080806/ts_usnews/obamafatiguecouldfollowavalancheofnewscoverage'Obama Fatigue' Could Follow Avalanche of News Coverage By Kevin Whitelaw Wed Aug 6, 3:43 PM ET Barack Obama's rock-star status has helped him gobble up the lion's share of the media attention so far in this campaign, but a new poll shows that "Obama fatigue" may be starting to set in with many voters. Nearly half of Americans say that they have been hearing "too much" about Obama lately, according to a new poll by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.
While a wide majority of Republicans unsurprisingly say that they have heard too much about the Illinois senator, 51 percent of independents agree, along with as many as a third of Democrats.Almost everybody seems to think that Obama is getting the greater part of the attention. The poll found that more than three quarters of the public reports having heard more about Obama in the past week or so than about McCain. There is one massive media event on the horizon that could, at least briefly, sideline some of the campaign coverage. The Olympic Games start Friday in China.
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Post by west-texan on Aug 13, 2008 7:44:14 GMT -5
I love this... No response from the liberals about this. Come on you PTS ultra-left weenines over there...whatcha got to say about this? Surely you guys on the Petty, Trivial, and Silly wanna-be political blog...have a response on this. Come on guys...you can do it. ;D
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Post by karenew on Aug 13, 2008 16:44:28 GMT -5
I consider myself more of a liberal conservative. Not a lefty by any means but not a far righter either.
I support Obama and I am sick of hearing about him. Mccain won't stop talking about him! All of Mccain's ads don't talk about his policies, agenda or qualifications. they ALL talk about Obama.
that being said... I am not changing who I support. while I don't agree 100% with Obama, I agree more with his policies and issues than I do with Mccain.
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spillingpoetry
TROLL
It looks like the Dixie Chicks were right
Posts: 159
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Post by spillingpoetry on Aug 13, 2008 18:40:37 GMT -5
I consider myself more of a liberal conservative. Not a lefty by any means but not a far righter either. I support Obama and I am sick of hearing about him. Mccain won't stop talking about him! All of Mccain's ads don't talk about his policies, agenda or qualifications. they ALL talk about Obama. that being said... I am not changing who I support. while I don't agree 100% with Obama, I agree more with his policies and issues than I do with Mccain. I'm right with ya. McCain can't say anything about pertinent issues, all he can do is slam Obama like GeeDubya slammed McCain in 2000. Typical Karl Rove style BS.
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