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MSNBC on PA - "Too early to call" (not too close to call, Hillary landslide incoming)

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Filed: Timeline

Exit poll data from CNN:

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries...ndex.html#PADEM

I did the crosstabs on a few categories, looks like Obama's support in the exit polls is around 47%. Actual support may differ from the exit poll, obviously.

I still see "too early to call"

I think any ideas about who is leading at this point is based on exit polls and not precincts reporting

This is what Fox New shows (with 0%)

http://www.foxnews.com/

cnn has some actual votes. With less than 3000 votes counted, Hillary leading 65-35.

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

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Exit poll data from CNN:

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries...ndex.html#PADEM

I did the crosstabs on a few categories, looks like Obama's support in the exit polls is around 47%. Actual support may differ from the exit poll, obviously.

I still see "too early to call"

I think any ideas about who is leading at this point is based on exit polls and not precincts reporting

This is what Fox New shows (with 0%)

http://www.foxnews.com/

cnn has some actual votes. With less than 3000 votes counted, Hillary leading 65-35.

exact same as Fox

90day.jpg

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Filed: Timeline

(CNN) – Race and gender played a role in the Democratic primary results – and benefited Hillary Clinton, the exit polls show.

20% of Pennsylvania Democrats said the race of a candidate played an important role in determining their vote. Clinton won those voters by nearly 20 percentage points, 59% to 41%.

20% of voters in neighboring Ohio, which voted last month, also said race helped decide their vote – and went for Clinton by 20 percentage points, 59-39.

21% of Pennsylvania primary voters said the gender of a candidate was an important factor in how they voted. Clinton overwhelmingly won among those voters, 71% to 29%.

From: CNN Senior Political Analyst Bill Schneider

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One thing that is noticable in the CNN exit polls is that Obama overwhelmingly won in the younger age brackets of 18-44.

And yet when you break that out by whiute voters Obama and Clinton are in a dead heat in the younger voters 18-29, but Clinton leads by 10% for 30-44s

90day.jpg

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