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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 map's release date (all polls earlier than that will drop off). For example, the map published on October 15 does not include any poll earlier than October 1, except if the latest poll in a state was conducted before that date (for example, the most recent poll in Vermont was taken on August 31). States within a three-point lead for the Republican or Democratic candidate are classified as toss-ups; states between a five-to-eight-point lead for the Republican or Democratic candidate are classified as "lean" for that candidate; states outside the eight-point lead are allocated to the respective party. Please note: for some states, the most recent polls available at this time are up to one year old and other states with no polling yet available have been classified Republican or Democrat based on their 2008 results.

Election 2012: State of the Race

Mitt Romney made more gains in the June 22 map, as Montana moved to the "safe Romney" column, increasing his total number of Electoral College votes to 101. Two important battleground states also moved in his direction, with New Hampshire changing from "safe Obama" to "lean Obama" and Iowa moving from "safe Obama" to "toss up." Barack Obama lost four EC votes as New Hampshire shifted from "safe Obama" to "lean Obama," bringing his total to 194. There are now eight (109 EC votes) "toss-up" states, five (71 EC votes) "lean Romney," and six (63 EC votes) "lean Obama" states. North Carolina, Michigan, and Nevada should be kept on the radar - tighter polls make it likely North Carolina will move to "lean Romney" and Nevada and/or Michigan will change to "toss up" status soon.

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