Campaign Satisfaction
Trayvon Martin Killing Is Public’s Top News Story
Campaign Seen as Too Long, Etch A Sketch Gaffe Little Noticed
Mixed Reactions to Republican Midterm Win
Public Less Happy Than After 2006 and 1994 Elections
High Marks for the Campaign, a High Bar for Obama
Republicans Want More Conservative Direction for GOP
High Marks for the Campaign, a High Bar for Obama
Republicans Want More Conservative Direction for GOP
Section 1: Report Card on the Campaign
Growing Doubts About McCain's Judgment, Age and Campaign Conduct
Obama's Lead Widens: 52%-38%
Section 1: The Obama-McCain Matchup
Views of Palin Fluid as Spotlight Remains on GOP Ticket
Public Sees Obama Ads Getting More Negative
McCain Gains On Issues, But Stalls As Candidate Of Change
Presidential Race Remains Even
Section 1: The Obama-McCain Matchup
Likely Rise in Voter Turnout Bodes Well for Democrats
McCain's Enthusiasm Gap, Obama's Unity Gap
Section 2: Evaluating the Candidates and Campaigns
Campaign Seen as Less Negative than 2004 Contest
Gore, Edwards Endorsements Would Have Modest Impact
McCain’s Support Soars, Democratic Race Tightens
Obama Gains Among Whites, Moderates and Middle-Income Democrats
In GOP Primaries: Three Victors, Three Constituencies
Romney Gains Among Non-Evangelical Conservatives
Iowa, NH Voters Heavily Courted, Dems Have Edge in Personal Contact
Campaign 'Robo-Calls' Pervasive
Modest Interest in 2008 Campaign News
Democratic Candidates Better Known, Even Among Republicans
Presidential Campaign Isn’t Making a Good First Impression
Older Men, Better Educated More Likely to Be Critical
by Richard Morin
A Summer of Discontent with Washington
Clinton Widens Lead, Giuliani Slips
Highlights