News from the Votemaster

This is a Website about polls, so here is a poll for you. After selecting the answer for each question, click on the corresponding "Vote" button. This records your vote and shows you the current score. You need to click on 11 "Vote" buttons in all. It shouldn't take more than a couple of minutes. Tomorrow, you can come back and view the final results. Thanks.

U.S. Citizens only: Who will/did you vote for? Barack Obama Mitt Romney Jill Stein Gary Johnson Other

Noncitizens only: Who would you like to win? Barack Obama Mitt Romney Jill Stein Gary Johnson Other

Everyone: Who do you expect to win? Barack Obama Mitt Romney Jill Stein Gary Johnson Other

How many seats will the Democrats have in the Senate? 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 > 54

How many seats will the Democrats have in the House? 200-205 206-210 211-217 218-225 226-230 > 230

Now a few questions about the readership of this site. Again click on "Vote" separately for each question.

This election aside, which party do you identify with? Democratic Republican Green Libertarian None (independent) Other

Which ideology best describes you? Liberal Moderate Conservative Other

Which issue is most important to you? Jobs Economy Federal debt Taxes Health care Abortion Foreign policy Immigration Dumping Obama Blocking the GOP Other

Where do you live? Northeast South (incl. TX) Midwest Mountain West West Coast Canada Latin America Europe Asia Oz/NZ Other

What is your gender? Male Female

What is your age? 18-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 >= 70

What is your highest degree? No HS degree High school 2-yr college Bachelors Masters Ph.D./M.D./J.D./etc.

Thank you!

Eight national polls were published yesterday. In five of them, Obama is leading. In the other three he is tied. However, he was trailing in two of the tied polls from the same pollsters earlier, so he is gaining. In politics, a week is a long time, but a day isn't so long and Romney has only a day to stop Obama's momentum. Here are the data.

Pollster Obama Romney Leading Pew 50% 47% Obama +3% YouGov 49% 47% Obama +2% Marist 48% 47% Obama +1% Ipsos 48% 47% Obama +1% WaPo/ABC 49% 48% Obama +1% Tarrance+Lake 48% 48% Tie Opinion Research 49% 49% Tie Rasmussen 49% 49% Tie

This morning, investigative reporters at a quality Dutch newspaper, De Volkskrant, published a story that Mitt Romney avoided $100 million in dividend taxes using a complex route that ran through The Netherlands. The mechanism used an arcane clause in the tax treaties that determine which country can tax which type of income when a construction, in this case a private equity fund, runs through multiple countries. Some of the data came from legal documents filed with the Dutch Chamber of Commerce. The reporters repeatedly asked Romney to comment on the story but he refused. Here is a translation of the article.

The Washington Post has a great analysis of the top races in all states. The state of the presidential race is well known at this point. Obama is slightly ahead in New Hampshire, Iowa, and Nevada. Romney leads in North Carolina. The only states where nobody is really ahead are Florida, Virginia, and Colorado. The top Senate races are also well known, as shown here. What the WaPo analysis gives is a look at close House races. Embattled incumbents include Rep. Allen West (R-FL), Rep. John Barrow (D-GA), Rep. Steve King (R-IA), Rep. John Tierney (D-MA), Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Rep. Frank Guinta (R-NH), Rep. Charlie Bass (R-NH), and quite a few others.

Florida elections and lawsuits seem to be an enduring couple. Vast numbers of early voters in Florida yesterday overwhelmed the polling stations. Some voters waited in line for 7 hours. Others couldn't vote at all. Some voters in Miami-Dade County were told to cast absentee ballots but when they tried to get them, the office issuing them closed down. In short, it was chaos in South Florida yesterday.

The Democratic Party sued the state in an effort to make adequate voting facilities available. Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL) just brushed off the problems and said everything was running smoothly. Last year the Republican-controlled legislature reduced early voting days from 14 to 8 in a more-or-less naked attempt to discourage voting in South Florida, which is strongly Democratic. Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties are where 32% of Florida's Democrats live. The judge doesn't have a lot of time to study the case and render a decision since tomorrow is election day.

Another election problem is that some electronic voting machines do not have a paper trail. They are still in use and could be pre-programmed to silently flip some votes or report an incorrect total and no one would have any way of auditing them. The Verified Voting Foundation has been fighting for voting systems with an audit trail for years, with mixed success. For the most part, each of the over 3,000 counties in the U.S. can buy whatever voting equipment it wants to. Few of the counties have any expertise in voting system security and just believe whatever their supplier tells them. The Verified Voting Foundation Website has a great deal of information about voting equipment and procedures, including a map showing the dominant equipment in each state. Florida and Virginia, for example, have a mixture of paper ballots and unverifiable electronic voting machines. Colorado has a mix of paper ballots and electronic voting machines, some with a paper trail and some without. Nevada and Utah are the only states with electronic voting machines all of which have paper trails. The paper trails are essential for an honest election since in the event of a close election, the paper ballots can be manually counted.

Voting machines aren't the only potential source of controversy in this election. Absentee ballots that are mailed in could lead to battles this time. Over 20% of the voters in Ohio and Florida mailed in absentee ballots in 2010 and this year the number is expected to be greater. The ballots are sent back in official envelopes that the voter must sign. If the signature does not match the one on file--in the opinion of whoever is doing the checking--the ballot will be rejected. Nationwide, over 2 million absentee ballots were rejected for bad signatures in 2008. In a close election, fights over signatures could erupt, with handwriting experts replacing lawyers as the key professionals in the fights.

In earlier elections, candidates spent a lot of money explaining to the voters why they were qualified to be President and what they would do if elected. For example, 56% of John Kerry's Ads in 2004 were positive and 42% contrasted him with Bush. This year, 59% of Obama's ads were negative and 27% contrasted him with Romney. Only 14% were positive ads, talking about why he should be reelected. Romney's ads were a tad less negative, but not much. Few people expect the situation to improve in future elections.

With individual donors giving millions of dollars to campaigns, state legislatures doing their best to minimize the number of people who vote, voters being made to wait 7 hours to vote, international observers being sent packing in Texas and Iowa, and voting machines that can't be checked, the Russian Foreign Ministry has said the U.S. election system is the worst in the world. That is certainly not true, but a case could be made that it is the worst among mature democracies, none of which experience the kinds of problems the U.S. has, from outsized influence of a few wealthy individuals to governmental attempts to suppress the vote to chaos at the polling stations. While the U.S. system is far better than the Russian one, that is setting the bar pretty low.

There are hard fought Senate races in many states, including Massachusetts, Virginia, Wisconsin, Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota, Montana, Nevada, and Arizona, but the presidential race doesn't seem to be having much impact on them. The Senate races have gotten so much publicity on their own and the candidates are so much larger than life that most voters are going to be making conscious choices in the Senate races, and not just voting a straight party line. In Massachusetts, Obama will win in a landslide, but the Senate race between Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) and Elizabeth Warren is close. Romney will sweep Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota, Montana, and Arizona, but that is cold comfort to the Republican Senate candidates in those states who are in very competitive races. So the bottom line is that we are likely to see quite a few split tickets this year.

Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno (R-NJ), who is the state's top elections official, has decreed that voters who can't vote due to Hurricane Sandy's aftermath may send absentee ballots in by email. Even under the best of circumstances, with careful planning, the possibility of fraud with email ballots is gigantic and in an emergency situation with no security controls in place, it is even worse. Fortunately, there are no competitive races in the state for any federal office, but there could be for state offices.

State Obama Romney Start End Pollster Arizona 46% 53% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP Colorado 48% 48% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Florida 46% 46% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Florida 47% 49% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Florida 48% 50% Oct 29 Oct 29 Pulse Opinion Research Iowa 50% 48% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Massachusetts 57% 37% Oct 31 Nov 03 U. of Mass. Massachusetts 58% 40% Oct 26 Nov 01 Western New England U. Minnesota 52% 41% Nov 01 Nov 03 SurveyUSA Missouri 45% 53% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP Montana 43% 53% Oct 29 Oct 29 Rasmussen Montana 43% 53% Oct 29 Oct 31 Mason Dixon Montana 45% 52% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP North Carolina 49% 49% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP New Hampshire 50% 48% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Ohio 48% 44% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Ohio 48% 46% Oct 29 Oct 29 Pulse Opinion Research Ohio 50% 42% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Ohio 52% 47% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Pennsylvania 49% 46% Nov 01 Nov 03 Muhlenberg Coll. Pennsylvania 49% 46% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research Virginia 47% 46% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Virginia 49% 48% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research Virginia 50% 44% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Virginia 51% 47% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Wisconsin 49% 48% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research

State Democrat D % Republican R % I I % Start End Pollster Arizona Richard Carmona 46% Jeff Flake 51% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP Florida Bill Nelson* 50% Connie McGillicuddy 46% Oct 29 Oct 29 Pulse Opinion Research Florida Bill Nelson* 52% Connie McGillicuddy 38% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Florida Bill Nelson* 54% Connie McGillicuddy 39% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren 48% Scott Brown* 49% Oct 31 Nov 03 U. of Mass. Minnesota Amy Klobuchar* 60% Kurt Bills 30% Nov 01 Nov 03 SurveyUSA Missouri Claire McCaskill* 48% Todd Akin 44% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP Montana Jon Tester* 45% Denny Rehberg 49% Oct 29 Oct 31 Mason Dixon Montana Jon Tester* 48% Denny Rehberg 46% Nov 02 Nov 03 PPP Ohio Sherrod Brown* 43% Josh Mandel 36% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Ohio Sherrod Brown* 50% Josh Mandel 42% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Ohio Sherrod Brown* 50% Josh Mandel 43% Oct 29 Oct 29 Pulse Opinion Research Ohio Sherrod Brown* 54% Josh Mandel 44% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Pennsylvania Bob Casey* 46% Tom Smith 45% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research Pennsylvania Bob Casey* 48% Tom Smith 42% Nov 01 Nov 03 Muhlenberg Coll. Virginia Tim Kaine 48% George Allen 46% Nov 02 Nov 04 IPSOS Virginia Tim Kaine 48% George Allen 48% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research Virginia Tim Kaine 49% George Allen 41% Nov 01 Nov 03 Zogby Virginia Tim Kaine 52% George Allen 46% Nov 03 Nov 04 PPP Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin 47% Tommy Thompson 48% Oct 30 Oct 30 Pulse Opinion Research

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