PredictionsEndorse2012 Senatorial Election Polls - OH ResultsPolls
Note: The Google advertisement links below may advocate political positions that this site does not endorse.

Source: Ipsos (url)

CandidatePolitical PartyPollGraphPoll Details
DSherrod Brown*Democratic50%piePoll Date: 2012-11-01
RJosh MandelRepublican42%Number Polled: 936
-Other-3%Margin of Error: 4%
-Undecided-5%Voter Type: Likely

  * = Incumbent

Brown with 8-point lead

 By: Ryne (R-WA) on 2012-11-01 @ 23:08:29

Question:
If the election for U.S. Senate were held today and the candidates were [ROTATE] Democrat SherrodBrown and Republican Josh Mandel [END ROTATE], for whom would you vote?
[IF ‘NONE/OTHER/DON’T KNOW/REFUSED’ AT Q2]
Q3. Do you lean more towards were [ROTATE] Democratic candidate Sherrod Brown or Republican candidateJosh Mandel [END ROTATE]?

About this Poll
These are findings from Ipsos polling conducted for Thomson Reuters from Oct. 30-Nov. 1, 2012. A sample of 1,217 American Registered Voters (RVs) and 936 Likely Voters (LVs), age 18 and over in Ohio was interviewed online. Data below has a credibility interval of plus or minus 3.2 percentage points for RVs and 3.7 for LVs. For all states, the data are weighted to each state’s current population voter data by gender, age, education, ethnicity, and a political values scale.Ipsos’ Likely Voter model (applied to Voting Intention questions only) uses a seven-item summated index, including questions on voter registration, past voting behavior, likelihood of voting in the upcoming election, and interest in following news about the campaign. This index is then transformed by logistic regression into estimated probabilities of voting.

Statistical margins of error are not applicable to online polls. The precision of the Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using acredibility interval . All sample surveys and polls may be subject to other sources of error, including, but not limited to coverage error and measurement error. Figures marked by an asterisk (*) indicate a percentage value of greater than zero but less than one half of one per cent. Where figuresdo not sum to 100, this is due to the effects of rounding.

View All Ohio Polls


Login to Post Comments

Forum Thread for this Poll

Back to 2012 Senatorial Polls Home - Polls Home


Terms of Use - DCMA Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

© Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Elections, LLC 2019 All Rights Reserved