War Room

Palin's Ayers attack hurts both Obama and McCain

John McCain may be able to score some points against Barack Obama if his campaign continues to use former Weather Underground member Bill Ayers against the Democratic nominee. But McCain is likely to pay a price, too.

HCD Research and the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion conducted a study of reactions to a speech Sarah Palin gave in which she invoked Ayers to attack Obama. They came up with some interesting results.

Obama's favorability ratings took a hit after participants viewed a clip of Palin's speech. Before watching the clip, 23 percent said they had a "somewhat favorable" opinion of Obama. Afterward, that number fell to 18 percent. That decline, HCD reports, is statistically significant at an 80 percent confidence level.

McCain also suffered, however. Before they viewed Palin's speech, 25 percent of participants said they had a "very unfavorable" opinion of the Republican nominee. Afterward, that number rose to 31 percent -- again, the uptick was statistically significant at an 80 percent confidence level.

Posted in: Sarah Palin, 2008 Election, Barack Obama, John McCain

Quote of the day
Right-wing commentator Debbie Schlussel bemoans the good old days of comic books, when the heroes weren't Obama-supporting terrorist lovers.
No good candidates for RNC chair
Why none of the six men in the race have the right stuff for the job of leading Republicans back to victory.
Report: Brennan will be top counterterror advisor
John Brennan, who was forced to withdraw from consideration to head the CIA, will reportedly have a vital job in the Obama administration.
Obama formally puts Kaine in charge of DNC
Expect the Democratic National Committee to pick up where Obama's campaign left off, as Tim Kaine -- a longtime Barack Obama backer -- takes control.

Current Salon Politics Stories

Salon Politics Blogs

Recent Posts

No good candidates for RNC chair
Why none of the six men in the race have the right stuff for the job of leading Republicans back to victory.
Report: Brennan will be top counterterror advisor
John Brennan, who was forced to withdraw from consideration to head the CIA, will reportedly have a vital job in the Obama administration.
Obama formally puts Kaine in charge of DNC
Expect the Democratic National Committee to pick up where Obama's campaign left off, as Tim Kaine -- a longtime Barack Obama backer -- takes control.
Previous Posts…

War Room RSS Feed

Posts by date

January 2009
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

About War Room

War Room is written and edited by Alex Koppelman, with contributions from Salon reporters around the country.