McCain slightly ahead of Obama in Fla.

Published: Sept. 20, 2008 at 10:42 PM

MIAMI, Sept. 20 (UPI) -- Republican presidential nominee John McCain holds a slim lead over Democrat Barack Obama in Florida, a poll released Saturday indicates.

The poll was conducted Sunday through Tuesday as turmoil on Wall Street hit the headlines, The Miami Herald reported. It was done by Democratic pollster Tom Eldon and Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway and paid for by the Herald, St. Petersburg Times and Bay News 9.

A total of 43 percent of those surveyed said the economy should be at the top of the next president's to-do list. Only 14 percent said that the war in Iraq was the most important and 12 percent listed terrorism.

''Obama is in a position to improve his poll numbers, given the confidence in his handling of the economy,'' Eldon said.

Eldon and Conway surveyed 800 likely voters.

The survey found that 55 percent of white voters support McCain and 38 percent Obama. More than 90 percent of black voters plan to vote for Obama, while 2 percent plan to vote for McCain.

Obama has been running ahead of McCain among Hispanics elsewhere. In Florida, where many Hispanics are Cuban-American, 51 percent support McCain to 41 percent for Obama.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
COL BKB: Wisconsin 78, Maryland 69 (3 min)
'Jetman' flight ends up in Mediterranean (13 min)
Report: Iverson announces NBA retirement (42 min)
Obama's use of 'unprecedented' chided
Soderling first through to ATP semifinals
UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
U.S., Japan to sign 'open skies' agreement
fark
Photoshop this guy in reflective shades
Suing Activision over World of Warcraft? Don't forget to subpoena Depeche Mode and Winona Rider,...
Hannity: This is one of the coldest years on record, so global warming is a hoax. Science: This...
Spotted cow removed from Mad River in NY. The image in your mind's eye is wrong
This is why you can't have nice things, America: "rather than a retelling of the Nativity story...
Canadian judge rules that the Happy Gilmore golf swing is wrong, biatch