The data is really too close to call. People can analyze all they want,
it doesn't change the fact that the polls are within the margin of
error.

For example, Zogby and the Wall Street Journal come up with a Kerry win:


OCTOBER 6, 2004

The presidential debate has lifted John Kerry back to where he was in
our battleground analysis before the Republican convention energized the
Bush campaign.

The latest Zogby Interactive poll puts Mr. Kerry ahead of President Bush
in 13 of the 16 closely contested states -- two more states than the
Massachusetts senator led before the debate and the most since August.
The latest survey was conducted between last Thursday, after the debate
ended, and Tuesday afternoon, before vice-presidential contenders Dick
Cheney and John Edwards debated.

Mr. Kerry moved ahead in two states (Ohio and Nevada) and increased his
lead in seven others -- though Mr. Kerry's margin over Mr. Bush in Ohio,
Arkansas and Florida was negligible -- less than one percentage point.
Mr. Bush's lead narrowed in the three states (Missouri, Tennessee and
West Virginia) that he remains ahead of Mr. Kerry. Overall, seven of Mr.
Kerry.s leads are within the margins of error, while all of Mr. Bush.s
leads are.

If the results on Election Day matched Zobgy's numbers, Mr. Kerry would
win. Here's how:

To analyze Zogby's results, we begin by assuming that the District of
Columbia and the 34 states that aren't in the battleground poll will
vote for the same political party this November as they did in the 2000
election. Thus, Mr. Bush starts with 189 electoral votes and Mr. Kerry
with 172. A candidate needs 270 electoral votes to win.

To those numbers, we add the electoral votes from the latest poll,
regardless of the margins of error or the spread between the candidates.
Mr. Kerry's 13 states have 150 electoral votes, while Mr. Bush's three
have 27 votes. The bottom line: Mr. Kerry would have 322 electoral votes
and the president would have 216.

That 106-vote margin is far wider than the last analysis, on Sept. 20,
the president was just 56 electoral votes behind Mr. Kerry. 



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