Friday, December 30, 2011

The 12 Kinds of Undecided Voters

Just over one-half of the Iowa Republicans surveyed by Time/CNN this week said they would ?definitely support? the candidate they backed at the time of the poll. Among the remainder, opinions are still fluid?by any measure, a staggeringly high share of likely voters. A much higher percentage of voters appear to make late decisions in the caucuses than in presidential general elections: While 10 percent of voters nationwide in the fall of 2008 told exit pollsters they made up their minds in the race?s final week, 40 percent of Republican caucus-goers in Iowa that year did. Seventeen percent said they made up their mind on the day of the caucuses. ??This presents a serious challenge for the Republicans vying for votes in this year?s Iowa caucus. To make matters worse, many voters who tell pollsters they?re undecided are actually anything but?they?ve made up their mind, but for one reason or another, don?t care to share their feelings with pollsters. What?s more, studies have shown that many undecided voters don?t ever show up to vote in elections at all, making efforts to win them over doubly doomed. But the candidates do have some strategies for dealing with this squirrely segment of the electorate. Campaigns know, for instance, that undecided voters are not all the same. Here are a dozen different types of self-described undecided voters, and how the Republican presidential candidates are dealing with them in the final days before the Iowa caucus. N.B.: Some voters likely fit into more than one category.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=85a15ae05c6bccd847feeb1ed346daa1

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