Four weeks after Election Day, Americans have found some political common ground: A whopping 78 percent approve of how President-elect Barack Obama is handling the transition, according to a new Gallup poll. (Dec. 2)
A look inside the data that helps define political activity and debates.
The Partly Cloudy Electorate
Voters' Vantage Point: SCOTUS
Voters' Vantage Point: The Economy
If the 2008 presidential election were being held today, for whom would you vote? (Among likely voters)
60%
of moderates voted for Obama, the highest proportion a Democrat has won in modern exit polling.
54%
of veterans voted for McCain.
NOTE: Movable voters are those who said they could change their minds or have yet to select a candidate.
SOURCE: This Washington Post-ABC News tracking poll is a four-night rolling average of telephone interviews with a random national sample of approximately 1,900 likely voters. Interviews are conducted on landline and cellular telephones. The poll started on Oct. 16 and runs through Nov. 3. The results from the full poll have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. Error margins for subgroups are larger.
The 2008 electorate was unquestionably a more Democratic group than had shown up at the polls in years, but does that change mean the nation's political views have shifted leftward?(Nov. 13)
SOURCE: National Election Pool exit poll conducted by Edison/Mitofsky.