The Hill Poll Week 2

District by district – Washington

WASHINGTON-03

Heavy Republican investment has GOP candidate in the lead

{mosads}Rep.
Brian Baird (Wash.) was one of the first Democrats to announce his
retirement this cycle, giving his party plenty of time to prepare for
the open-seat race.

Still,
Democrat Denny Heck is trailing Republican Jamie Herrera by two points,
40 percent to 42, with 15 percent of respondents undecided, according
to The Hill’s 2010 Midterm Election Poll.

This is a district
that voted in favor of President Obama by eight points two years ago,
and his disapproval rating here isn’t as high as in other competitive
districts surveyed in The Hill’s poll. Independents, however, are
favoring Herrera 42 percent to 33.

Herrera is leading among
male voters, while Heck leads among females. Younger voters are
breaking for Herrera, while older voters are trending toward Heck.

Republicans are spending a lot more in this race than their Democratic counterparts.

The NRCC has spent around $644,000 in this district, while the DCCC has spent about $105,000.

The
Hill’s poll was conducted Oct. 2-7, surveyed 400 likely voters via the
telephone and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percent.

The Hill 2010 Midterm
Election Poll Stories WEEK 2

Voters more likely to see Dems as dominated by extremists
Independents prefer cutting the deficit to spending on jobs
Democrats have edge on question of extending Bush tax cuts
Republicans are up in 8 of 10 open House seats
After forty Dem years, Obey’s seat in jeopardy
Majority of voters say they want a viable third party
District by district
Data: The numbers the stories are based on
Editorial: The results so far

District by

district results

Arkansas
Illinois
West Virginia
Hawaii
New Hampshire
Pennsylvania
Michigan
Tennessee
Washington

The Hill/ANGA 2010 Midterm
Election Poll Stories WEEK 1

Voters: Nancy Pelosi did not drain swamp
Tea Party is firing up the Democrats
Republican voters more ‘passionate’ about voting in the midterm election

About the poll

GOP leads widely, Dems in danger but races tight

Feelings about Obama make midterms a national election

Independents prefer divided government, lean Republican

Distaste for healthcare law crosses party lines
Editorial: Knowing who will win

District by
district results

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Illinois
Maryland
Michigan
Nevada
New Mexico
Ohio
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Virginia