Campaign Outreach
Cable Leads the Pack as Campaign News Source
Twitter, Facebook Play Very Modest Roles
Section 2: Debates and Campaign Outreach
Mixed Reactions to Republican Midterm Win
Public Less Happy Than After 2006 and 1994 Elections
Section 4: Campaign Outreach
Ground War More Intense Than 2006, Early Voting More Prevalent
Democrats Stirring But Are No Match for Energized Republicans
Ground War More Intense Than 2006, Early Voting More Prevalent
Democrats Stirring But Are No Match for Energized Republicans
Section 2: The Ground Game, Political Ads and Voter Participation
High Marks for the Campaign, a High Bar for Obama
Republicans Want More Conservative Direction for GOP
Section 4: Early Voting, Campaign Outreach and the Issues
Young Voters in the 2008 Election
by Scott Keeter, Director Survey Research, Juliana Horowitz, Research Associate and Alec Tyson, Research Analyst, Pew Research Center for the People & the Press
Liberal Dems Top Conservative Reps in Donations, Activism
More Than a Quarter of Voters Read Political Blogs
Liberal Dems Top Conservative Reps in Donations, Activism
More Than a Quarter of Voters Read Political Blogs
Section 2: Campaign Contacts and Election Emotions
Robo-Calls Now Lead Other Forms of Campaign Outreach
Wealthy Democratic Donors Now Outnumber Wealthy GOP Donors
Obama Weathers the Wright Storm, Clinton Faces Credibility Problem.
National Discontent Approaches 20-Year High, Bush Approval at 28%
Section 3: Voters Targeted by Robo-Calls
Iowa, NH Voters Heavily Courted, Dems Have Edge in Personal Contact
Campaign 'Robo-Calls' Pervasive
Race Tightens Again, Kerry’s Image Improves
Democrats, Blacks Less Confident in Accurate Vote Count
Highlights