Back to regular view     Print this page

Subscribe   •   EasyPay   •   e-paper
Reader Rewards   •   Customer Service

Become a member of our community!

Lynn Sweet's blog
Obama Family Tree
Barack Obama
Politics
Blogs
Media Partners
News
Columnists
 


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Barack Obama
Print Article Email Article Share / Bookmark




TOP STORIES ::
Benefactor to many now needs a bone-marrow donor

Wild session ends with Dow down 126 points

5 things Hawks must do on ice to make changes count

Field advantage: Country Fest gets bigger, better

Benefactor to many now needs a bone-marrow donor


VIDEO ::   MORE »




Poll: Obama beats McCain as bbq guest

Comments

July 2, 2008

WASHINGTON---- People would rather barbecue burgers with Barack Obama than with John McCain.

While many are still deciding who should be president, by 52 percent to 45 percent they would prefer having Obama than McCain to their summer cookout, according to an Associated Press-Yahoo News poll released Wednesday.

Men are about evenly divided between the two while women prefer Obama by 11 percentage points. Whites prefer McCain, minorities Obama. And Obama is a more popular guest with younger voters while McCain does best with the oldest.

Having Obama to a barbecue would be like a relaxed family gathering, while inviting McCain ''would be more like a retirement party than something fun,'' said Wesley Welbourne, 38, a systems engineer from Washington, D.C.

Party label means a lot, with three-quarters of Democrats picking the Democrat Obama and the same number of Republicans picking McCain, a Republican. Independents are about evenly split.

''John and I would probably have a lot to talk about,'' said Republican Michael Mullen, 53, of Merrimac, Mass., like McCain a Navy veteran.

One in six people saying they'd vote for McCain prefer Obama as their barbecue guest; just one in 20 Obama backers would invite McCain.

The AP-Yahoo News survey of 1,759 adults was conducted online by Knowledge Networks from June 13-23 and had an overall margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.3 percentage points. The margin of sampling error for subgroups was larger.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.