American Polls
Shout outs to American Polls
i love your web site! about 1 year ago
Welcome to Swivel! about 1 year ago
About Me
USAElectionPolls.com is a non-partisan polling organization committed to providing you with easily accessible polling numbers from pollsters nationwide. We have access to polling numbers for upwards of about 200 separate pollsters so that you can be kept abreast of how the 2008 presidential election race is shaping.
News organizations such as CNN, USA Today, Newsweek, LA Times put a great deal of emphasis on their own polls even when they are in disagreement with the polls of other organizations. A website like ours allows you to identify where Americans really stand on the issues/candidates by being able to compare polls for yourself. You have the power!
Polling information can be the vital element that takes any research paper (opinion, political, argumentative) to the next step by laying out actual views of the American people. Consider the differences between the following statements "A whopping 85% of Americans feel..." as opposed to making broad general statements such as "Many American feel..." that will likely be dinged by your professors or other academics. For this reason, we've decided to offer our data on swivel.com for a more academic audience.
We wholeheartedly invite all of you to let us know how you are using our data as well as give us suggestions for other data that you might seek. We are always looking to expand relevant and useful information to you -- our friends.
Featured Graphs
|
|
Barack Obama has not gained traction in Pennsylvania until March 2008 but is still an average of about 7% behind Hillary Clinton. |
Featured Data Sets
|
|
The 2000 presidential election proved to be one of the most heated and contested race in modern US history. |
|
|
The 2004 election was a close race between John Kerry and George Bush. Several states were won by slim margins: Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. These states prove to be heated battleground states in the 2008 election. |




