Here's what we have today, Republican pollster Strategic Vision and Democratic pollster Public Policy Polling (.pdf).
| Candidate | St. Vis. | PPP | Pollster | RCP |
| Clinton | 47 | 46 | 50.0 | 48.7 |
| Obama | 42 | 43 | 43.0 | 42.0 |
At this point, the majority of recent polling finds the race between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama in Pennsylvania to be a tie. There is little reason at this point (beyond the reputation of the pollster itself) to believe that this week's SurveyUSA poll showing Clinton leading by 18 points is on the mark. No, more and more it's looking like the contest in Pennsylvania is tightening up quite a bit -- so much so that Obama might actually have a valid shot at winning.
At the least, this state appears to be turning into a real problem for Clinton, who genuinely was leading by a margin in the upper-teens just a couple of weeks ago. While it's entirely understandable, and indeed expected, that Obama would see real movement in Pennsylvania given the unprecedented sum of money his campaign is spending on ads, Clinton simply needs to win big in Pennsylvania -- big in delegates, big in the popular vote -- if she has any hopes of catching up in the two metrics. If she is unable to win by a solid double-digit margin come April 22, I do believe that she is really going to have to reconsider whether she is actually able to secure the Democratic nomination.
Update [2008-4-9 17:25:35 by Jonathan Singer]: A new poll from Insider Advantage puts Clinton up 48 percent to 38 percent, a 10-point lead that falls outside of the margin of error (and is thus statistically significant). In this poll, Clinton's mark is about where it is in other polling, though Obama comes in a bit below where he is in other surveys. An indication that the SUSA poll isn't totally off the mark? Perhaps. But I'd still like to see more polling put the race outside, rather than inside, the margin of error before I'm convinced...
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