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Poll Puts Obama Ahead In Ohio

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  • Poll Puts Obama Ahead In Ohio

    POLL PUTS OBAMA AHEAD IN OHIO
    Jon Craig

    Cincinnati.com
    http://news.cincinnati.com/a rticle/20081104/NEWS0106/811040361
    Nov 4
    OH

    'Final projection' has him up 6 points over McCain

    Barack Obama is likely to prevail over John McCain in the fierce
    battle for Ohio's 20 electoral votes, according to an Ohio Poll
    released Monday.

    The poll by the University of Cincinnati's Institute for Policy
    Research - billed as a "final projection" of today's results by
    institute pollster Eric Rademacher, shows Obama with 51.5 percent to
    45.7 percent for McCain.

    Obama's lead is outside the poll's margin of error of plus or minus
    2.7 percentage points.

    It shows a small bump for the Democrat over a poll that Rademacher
    conducted almost two weeks ago for a consortium of Ohio newspapers,
    including The Enquirer. The Ohio Newspaper Poll showed Obama with a
    3 percentage point lead with 49 percent support.

    No Republican president has ever won the presidency without winning
    Ohio. President Bush won the state four years ago, by a scant 118,000
    votes out of 4.6 million cast. It was the final piece of the electoral
    map puzzle for Bush, putting him over the 270 needed for election.

    The Ohio Poll released Monday was conducted between Wednesday and
    Sunday. The poll interviewed 1,308 likely voters by telephone.

    Howard Wilkinson

    Voter concert canceled

    Organizers canceled a planned get-out-the-vote concert after sound
    equipment for the show was delayed leaving Phoenix, officials from
    Cincy Rocks the Vote Tour said Monday. The event, originally slated
    for Fountain Square at 11:30 a.m., was to include performances from
    Lennon John, Yung Millionairez and others. Bootsy Collins was to speak.

    Ben Fischer

    Flier questions Schmidt vote

    In a last-minute broadside, independent congressional candidate David
    Krikorian distributed a flier Sunday accusing U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt,
    R-Miami Township, of accepting "blood money" for her opposition to
    officially recognizing the Armenian genocide.

    The flier compares Schmidt's position opposed to the proposal, which
    appeared in front of Congress earlier this year, with others who
    support it. Also, Krikorian, of Armenian descent, accused Schmidt of
    betraying her faith by supporting the Muslim Turks over the Christian
    Armenians and said she needs psychiatric help.

    He also said voters would be complicit in "crimes against humanity"
    if Schmidt is re-elected today and called on her to leave the race.

    In the 1910s, the Ottoman Empire killed 1.5 million Armenians. Many
    countries and states have passed measures officially declaring
    it genocide. However, many opponents say such a move from the
    U.S. Congress would unnecessarily enrage Turkey, a vital U.S. ally
    in the Middle East, which argues that the violence does not meet the
    definition for genocide.

    Schmidt spokesman Bruce Pfaff dismissed Krikorian as a "single-issue"
    candidate and said she would not withdraw.

    Ben Fischer

    Who are these people?

    Don't be surprised if you see outside legal groups, voter rights'
    organizations and international observers at polling places with the
    nation's attention on Ohio as a key state. The AFL-CIO's "My Vote,
    My Right" voter protection project plans to dispatch about 500 poll
    observers statewide, including 105 in Hamilton County. Observers are
    not allowed to interfere with voters inside polling precincts. Anyone
    in line when polls close at 7:30 p.m. has a legal right to vote. You
    will be asked to remove any campaign material when you enter the
    polling location, so make sure buttons, posters or T-shirt logos can
    be removed or covered.
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