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Opinion: National electoral map: McCain gains Indiana while Obama holds 277

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Nearly two dozen new state polls in recent days show the Democratic Party ticket headed by Sen. Barack Obama holding strong with 277 hypothetical electoral votes, seven more than needed for election, but Sen. John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin have regained traditionally Republican Indiana from the tossup category.

This according to the latest state-by-state poll research compiled by Karl Rove & Co. and published in The Ticket by permission every few days.

With Indiana’s 11 electoral votes, the first time since early September that the Republican ticket has gained, McCain-Palin now hold 174 electoral votes while another 87 remain in the tossup category.

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A chart showing the weekly movements of this hypothetical electoral vote race is available after the jump, along with an explanation of the research’s methodology. Click on the Read more line below.

-- Andrew Malcolm

Speaking of electoral votes, you can still get free instant alerts on all Ticket items like this flashed directly to your cellphone by registering here at Twitter.

Methodology

For each state, the map uses the average of all public telephone polls (Internet polls are not included in the average) taken within 14 days of the most recent poll available in each state.

For example, if the most recent poll in Montana was taken July 1, the average includes all polls conducted between July 1 and 15. States within a 3-point lead for McCain or Obama are classified as tossups; states outside the 3-point lead are allocated to the respective candidate.

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There is no polling data available for the District of Columbia, but its 3 electoral votes are allocated to Obama.

This map and chart published courtesy of Karl Rove & Co.

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