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October 26, 2012 11:59 am
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Day 11: The Algemeiner’s Daily IBD/TIPP Jewish Vote Tracking Poll – Obama: 70.8% Romney 27.7%

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Mitt Romney and President Obama at a previous debate. Photo: Screenshot.

President Obama climbed yet again in today’s Algemeiner IBD/TIPP Daily Jewish Vote Aggregate Average Tracking Poll, adding 1.5 points to reach 70.8%.  Rival Mitt Romney’s numbers dropped by 2% to reach 27.7%, his lowest total since the first figures published by The Algemeiner. The undecided figure is now 0%, as  it appears that voters have now made their decisions.

Today’s Algemeiner poll is an average of aggregated Jewish vote figures provided in the daily IBD/TIPP tracking poll over the last 10 days, and is gleaned from an approximate total sampling of 200-240 Jewish respondents. Assuming a U.S. Jewish population of 6,588,065 the confidence level of this poll is 95% with a margin of error of between 6.3% and 6.9% depending on the precise sample size.

These numbers mark the lowest level of support for a Democratic candidate since Michael Dukakis who received 64% of the Jewish vote running against George H.W. Bush in 1988, and the greatest amount of Jewish support for a Republican candidate since that same year when Bush attracted 35%.

In 2008, the IBD/TIPP Poll was crowned the most accurate.

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