In June 2004, polls were indicating that people would like a Lieberman-Gephardt ticket. Alas, DU mates...let's do a hats off to President Lieberman and the wonderful job that Dick Gephardt is doing as VP. After all, the polls can't be wrong, can they?
Snip:
"So what's going on in early campaign polls? Potential voters often choose candidates they are familiar with. Many announced candidates are simply unknown quantities. Even after his years in the Senate and a previous presidential run, 55 percent of Americans interviewed in an April Gallup poll still could not say whether they had a favorable or unfavorable opinion of Delaware Democratic Sen. Joe Biden. The earliest polls say more about name recognition than likely votes.
New candidates — such as Sen. Obama — often gain support in early polls when they enter the race. Voters don't yet know a lot about them, and what they know comes from the generally positive coverage, as well as the new entrant's effective status as "none of the above." For example, in January, more than half of registered voters who said they would vote in a Democratic primary/caucus had no opinion one way or the other about Obama. But 40 percent were favorable, and only 3 percent were not.
And then of course, there are the phantom candidates, not yet in the race, whose appeal says more about the candidates currently in the race than about how well the non-candidate will fare if he or she does join in. Former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson fits this category.
So was there real change in the Democratic horserace in the last few weeks? Was Obama first up and then down? Probably not. These early polls tell us about voter feelings, but they often have not been particularly good predictors of what will happen in an election.
After all, four years ago, in June 2003, the Democratic leader in the Gallup Poll was Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, Al Gore's running mate in the 2000 election. Missouri Congressman Dick Gephardt was running second. Whatever happened to the Lieberman-Gephardt ticket?"
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/06/20/opinion/pollpositions/main2955109.shtml