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TX-10 Leans Red, Moving Blue


by: IVR Polls

Tue Jun 03, 2008 at 09:56 AM CDT


(More good news for Democrats in Texas - promoted by Matt Glazer)

In 2004, George Bush took 62% of the vote in Texas' 10th Congressional District. In 2006, Michael McCaul was held to 55% by a poorly funded Democrat and a relatively well funded Libertarian. My own polling a week before the election found 7% undecided, but the challengers had no funds to close the deal and undecided stayed with the incumbent. As a disclaimer, and an illustration of the funding issue, I did $90 in robocalls for the challenger, Ted Ankrum, in the closing days.

For the 2008 race, in polling on June 2, 528 likely voters gave McCaul a 5.4% lead over Democratic challenger Larry Joe Doherty. McCaul received 51.7% to Doherty's 46.3%, with 2.0% undecided.

TX-10 is described as a 'barbell district' due to having a large chunk of the district in Travis County (Austin), a large chunk in Harris County (Houston) and a thin strip of highway frontage in between. In 2006, Harris went 71-26 for McCaul and Travis went 56-38 for Ankrum. In this poll, McCaul takes Harris 63-33 and Doherty takes Travis by the same 63-33. Travis is the slightly larger end of the TX-10 barbell, but the 'bar' in between went 70-30 for McCaul, resulting in a McCaul lead.

Of note, I also polled Obama-McCain and Cornyn-Noriega in this district and found those races to be more favorable to the other Republicans than they are to McCaul. Cornyn leads Noriega 54-44 and McCain leads Obama 55-41. Statewide, my past results have been more in line with Baselice than SurveyUSA or Rasmussen on these races, but I do not have current statewide numbers to report.

Historically, turnout in this district doesn't include large numbers of Latinos or African-Americans. In this poll, both groups went with Doherty, Latinos by 2-1 and African-Americans by 7-1. If Obama at the top of the ticket increases African-American general election turnout as he has in the primary, and these additional voters follow through on the down-ballot races, Doherty could close the gap even further. Increased Latino turnout in the primary was mainly a reflection of Clinton's popularity, but there is a possibility that Noriega could also increase Latino turnout for the general, further benefitting Doherty.

There is no significant gender gap in these results, but age is a factor. Voters under 40 go with the Democrat in each race. Voters from 40-59 go with the Republican by small margins. Voters over 60 go Republican in all cases, but margin is much larger in races for President and Senator.

528 likely voters polled 6/2/2008, margin of error 4.3%
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Thanks for running the numbers (3.00 / 1)
It's always interesting to see how things are going, and I appreciate the benchmarks.

Keep 'em coming!

Disclosure: Former Political Director for Lee Leffingwell for Mayor of Austin ('09)


My pleasure (4.33 / 3)
Plan on doing a few other polls prior to the convention.

Texas Economics

[ Parent ]
Run Chris! Run! (0.00 / 0)
One more reason for Chris Bell to run in SD-17: there is roughly a 40,000 vote overlap between CD-10 and SD-17.  (See my diary on this here). This overlapping area though is one of the hardest Republican nuts to crack in Harris County.  The two of them working together is our best shot to mitigate it.


huge news for LJD (0.00 / 0)
Although the campaign appears to have gone silent in the last 2 months, this is tremendous news for Doherty.

While McCaul still clings to a bare majority, Doherty is remarkably high this early in the General.

We'll have updated fundraising numbers in a few weeks and that will really set the table for our November prospects.

Please refer to KT's signature.


Fantastic news! Do you have regional cross-tabs? (0.00 / 0)
I'd especially like to know how Larry Joe Doherty is doing in Harris County, which makes up 35% of the district. That's a very difficult area to organize, as there are very few precinct chairs, and as many neighborhoods didn't even exist a few years ago. On the plus side, the GOP isn't very organized in the new neighborhoods either, and a few boots on the ground could make a big difference.

If he hasn't already done so (and he probably has), Larry Joe needs to contact every state delegate and almost every county delegate from those precincts and get them working.

Larry Joe can ride the Travis County Coordinated Campaign and the presidential campaigns to a big margin in Travis County, and he has excellent connections in the rural counties (especially Washington), but winning overall will require keeping the margins in Harris down, and that will take a lot of money and a lot of work.  


Bad News for Noriega (0.00 / 0)
   Cornyn won CD10 by 56-44 over Ron Kirk in 2002.  As it happens, he beat Kirk statewide by the exact same 12-point margin -- 55 to 43.
  Kirk spent $15 million that year.
  Now Cornyn is leading Noriega by 10 points in CD10.  Noriega won't have anything like $15 million, but Cornyn will.  Not a good sign for Noriega.

not necessarily (5.00 / 1)
this ain't your mama's CD 10. things have changed due in large measure to the utter failure of Bush, Cornyn and the dregs of the former repub majority.

and Texas has changed tremendously as well.

with 153 days left and Cornyn clinging to a bare majority in most polls, Noriega is still in the hunt.

I recalled Kirk spending more like $10m...but I've been wrong before.

Please refer to KT's signature.


[ Parent ]
I think you're right Colin (0.00 / 0)
I recall Kirk spending just over $9 million.

[ Parent ]
Looking good for LJD (0.00 / 0)
Obama and Noriega's numbers could be better, but considering that this district went for Bush by 62% in 2004, they show that we've made progress.  And Doherty is looking like he's going to put up a good fight down there.  I think that AA, Latino, and young voter turnout is going to close the gap for these guys some.  Obama's numbers could improve as he makes progress in unifying the party, and he might also get some help from Bob Barr, who could shave a few percentage points off of McCain's numbers.  Noriega's numbers will get better as his name recognition increases, and hopefully he'll find a way to close the fundraising gap a bit.   Overall, I think we have cause for at least guarded optimism.

- 7.12, - 7.54 / Attack of the Machine Elves / My Twitter feed

Let's look at the polling...Is it Credible? (0.00 / 0)
I'm not sure how anyone can use these polling numbers as an actual look at a district that covers such a large expanse. First, I would like to say that this poll has no credibility seeing that it is from a liberal polling source. I don't care if you are Liberal/Conservative but when you poll a group of people that lean to one side or the other your numbers will obviously lean that way as well. Seeing that IVR POLLING admits to making robocalls against McCaul in 2006 I don't see how anyone can say this polling service is nonbiased. Lastly, this polling service could easily have polled in the more liberal Travis County to skew the results. I have a big problem with the credibility of this poll, and I think you should as well. It might make you feel good to see that District 10 is moving blue, but if you look in all actuality (walk and talk with the voters) you will see that this is just a phantasm and when we have our chance to vote in November the truth will arise.

-Truthseeker


considering that IVR polls (0.00 / 0)
absolutely nailed the polling in the 2006 CD10 race, I think it has some credibility.


[ Parent ]
I am biased (0.00 / 0)
Every pollster has opinions and votes. But I am not a cheerleader. I try to understand the electorate and accurately assess their intent. How shall I say - I seek the truth. No pollster had a more accurate take on the recent Texas presidential primary. I'm always looking for ways to improve my method, but what I am doing now works well.

This is my fourth poll of District 10, and I think I know it pretty well by now. My method is based on a three dimensional age/gender/ethnicity weighting, with a regional assessment to make sure there is no skew. Demographic weightings match historical turnout. Regional weightings are pretty close, though Travis is only 39% compared to 42% in 2006 and Harris is 38% compared to 37% in 2006. That's a slight bias towards Harris, but too small to make a significant difference.

For the record, the robocalls didn't mention McCaul. They contained a quick bio and a statement by Ankrum and primarily went to Harris households. I had not formed IVR Polls at that time.

Texas Economics


[ Parent ]
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