Poll | Date | Sample | MoE | Haslam (R) | Brown (D) | Spread |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCP Average | 8/11 - 10/23 | -- | -- | 56.5 | 30.0 | Haslam +26.5 |
CBS News/NYT/YouGov | 10/16 - 10/23 | 974 LV | 5.0 | 58 | 30 | Haslam +28 |
Rasmussen Reports | 8/11 - 8/12 | 750 LV | 3.0 | 55 | 30 | Haslam +25 |
Tennessee was long something of an anomaly in the South. It had a strong Republican presence in the eastern portion of the state (and to a lesser extent in the west/south/central regions), which allowed it to maintain a sizeable presence in the state. Unlike the rest of the South, Democratic presidential candidates rarely received more than 55 percent of the vote there, and in good Republican years, they even lost.
So Tennessee was one of the first states in the South to align with the GOP and was the first to elect two Republican senators. It also occasionally elected Republican governors, even during the Jim Crow era: It did so in 1880, 1910, 1912 and 1920.
Since Jim Crow ended, the state has tended to alternate the governorship between the parties: Democrats from 1966-1970, 1974-1978, 1986-1994 and 2002-2010, with Republicans in the gaps. This year, the Republican governor, Bill Haslam, is considered a safe bet for re-election.
Poll | Date | Sample | MoE | Haslam (R) | Brown (D) | Spread |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCP Average | 8/11 - 10/23 | -- | -- | 56.5 | 30.0 | Haslam +26.5 |
CBS News/NYT/YouGov | 10/16 - 10/23 | 974 LV | 5.0 | 58 | 30 | Haslam +28 |
CBS News/NYT/YouGov | 9/20 - 10/1 | 1007 LV | 4.0 | 60 | 28 | Haslam +32 |
CBS News/NYT/YouGov | 8/18 - 9/2 | 1056 LV | 4.0 | 56 | 29 | Haslam +27 |
Rasmussen Reports | 8/11 - 8/12 | 750 LV | 3.0 | 55 | 30 | Haslam +25 |