Further evidence that Georgia’s 15 Electoral Votes may be in play thanks to a guy named Bob Barr:
June 19, 2008 — A New InsiderAdvantage / PollPosition survey conducted June 18 of registered likely voters in the November presidential contest shows Sen. John McCain leading Sen. Barack Obama by a single point in Georgia, making the race in Georgia a statistical tie. Libertarian Bob Barr, a former Republican Congressman from Georgia, received 6 percent of the vote. The telephone survey of 408 registered likely voters is weighted for age, race, gender, and political affiliation. The survey has a margin of error of +/- 5%. It was conducted with InsiderAdvantage’s research partner Majority Opinion Research. PollPosition is InsiderAdvantage’s new branding name (look for additional information and expansion of PollPosition in the coming months).
The Results:
McCain: 44%
Obama: 43%
Barr: 6%
Undecided: 7%
Of course, the Barr effect is only part of what’s happening in Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, and elsewhere in the South:
“As Barack Obama has become the clear presumptive nominee of his party, the race has become defined and voters appear to be taking early stands in the race.
“Georgia is competitive for Obama for several reasons. First, it has a high African-American voting age population (VAP). Second, it has an unusually high percentage of younger voters (18-29). Both of these groups are more in the Obama camp, with black voters already at the 83 percent level and likely to climb.
“Equally important, like its neighbor Florida, Georgia has a high percentage of voters who consider themselves independent. Obama is carrying that critical swing vote by about 10 percent in the poll.
In this survey, as in almost every survey we have seen or conducted, there is a ‘great divide’ among age groups. Among those 45 years of age and older, McCain is the clear leader. Among voters who are 44 years of age or younger, Obama leads.(…)
As to the Bob Barr effect, Barr’s numbers dropped slightly overall from our poll of Georgia in March. However, he remains at a 6% level, healthy for a Libertarian. And among senior voters he receives nearly 10% of the vote.
But that alone could be enough to deny the state to McCain.
The overall verdict is one that is not good for Republicans who have relied on the “Solid South” for decades:
“My view is that Georgia, the 9th largest state in the nation with 15 electoral votes, will remain a major new battleground state through November. This changes the landscape of electoral politics as Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, and perhaps another surprise southern state, join Florida as potential “swing states,” that cannot be presumed to vote Republican in 2008.”
Meaning that this election has the potential to either be very close, or a 1988-style blowout.


June 22nd, 2008 at 7:35 am
Bob Barr and the LP and the Ron Paul supporters will need to blackmail John McCain BEFORE he choses a VP…to pick a libertarian VP.
The way to do that is to quickly get polling in must-have Republican states like Georgia, North Carolina, Nevada and Montana to show that the LP is spoiling McCain’s chances.
We can immediately takeover the Republican Party if we get Barr’s poll numbers up now.