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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Poll: Obama gains in key demographics

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

WASHINGTON – Barack Obama has taken clear leads over Hillary Rodham Clinton among white men, middle-income earners and liberals, allowing him to catch his faltering rival in their race for the Democratic presidential nomination, a national poll showed Monday.

The Associated Press-Ipsos survey highlights how the bottom is falling out among some supporters of Clinton since the last survey was taken two weeks ago. Since then, Obama has gained momentum by winning 11 consecutive primaries and caucuses while taking a small lead among delegates to the party’s convention this summer.

The Illinois senator leads Clinton by 23 percentage points among white men and by 17 points among liberals – groups that were evenly divided between the two in early February. He has a similar advantage among people earning $50,000 to $100,000 annually – whom she led earlier by 13 points.

Clinton maintains robust leads among some groups that have been cornerstones of her candidacy, including those age 65 and up, white women and people earning less than $50,000 annually.

Overall, Obama has 46 percent to Clinton’s 43 percent, a virtual tie. Clinton had a slight 5 point lead nationally in early February.

Obama’s advances among voting groups are even more stark when viewed longer term.

In mid-January – when primaries and caucuses were just beginning – Clinton had a 7-point lead among all men, a group she now trails by 25 points. The two were about even among college graduates, whom Obama now leads by 20 points.

In the AP-Ipsos poll, 57 percent said superdelegates should support the contender ahead in the voting while 38 percent said they should back whoever they think gives Democrats the best chance of winning the White House. Of those saying the officials should follow the voters, two-thirds said they should heed nationwide results while a third preferred basing it on the officials’ own districts.

Obama’s supporters were likelier than Clinton’s to favor following the voting results so far.

Among the nearly 800 superdelegates, Clinton leads in endorsements 241 to 182, according to the latest tally by the Associated Press. But Obama has won more delegates in primaries and caucuses, giving him the overall delegate lead, 1,370 to 1,274.5.

In matchups looking ahead to November’s general election, Clinton leads Arizona Sen. John McCain by 48 percent to 43 percent. Obama’s lead over the virtually certain GOP nominee is twice that size, 51 percent to 41 percent.

In the GOP race, McCain leads Mike Huckabee, his only remaining major rival, by 53 percent to 27 percent, about twice the margin he had over the former Arkansas governor just two weeks ago. McCain has all but formally clinched the nomination. Texas Rep. Ron Paul had 8 percent.

McCain has large leads over Huckabee among people calling themselves loyal Republicans, conservatives and Southerners, a measure of his growing acceptance among groups that initially were skeptical of him.

The AP-Ipsos poll was conducted from Feb. 22-24 and involved telephone interviews with 1,011 adults nationally. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.