Obama maintains lead in 7-Eleven coffee cup poll, but cup counts shift in some swing states after first debate.

There are 14 days left to vote in 7-Election, 7-Eleven’s presidential coffee cup poll.

Before the first debate, President Barack Obama had maintained a steady 20-point lead over Republican challenger Mitt Romney, through the first four weeks of polling. But three of the nine swing states showed movement after the first debate, with Romney cup sales in some areas apparently perked up.

For the week leading up to the debate, Obama led Romney in 7-Election cup sales, 63 to 37 nationally. Counts on Oct. 4, however, were closer with Obama’s lead shrinking to 57% over Romney’s 43%. In Denver, where the first debate took place, the numbers were even tighter—before and after. Leading up to the first debate, Obama’s lead averaged 16 points, 58% to Romney’s 42%. The following day, the candidates were nearly tied—Obama, 51%, and Romney, 49%.

“This is the fourth 7-Election, and we go into it every time not knowing if our results will reflect the actual outcome,” said Nancy Smith, 7-Eleven vice president for marketing. “But history, so far, speaks for itself, and 7-Eleven seems to have the pulse, maybe a bit more rapid, of the nation.

“We invite people to come to 7-Eleven and support their candidate by getting a red or blue 7-Election cup and, even more important, to take advantage of their privilege to vote in the real election on Nov. 6,” she added.

Through Wednesday, Oct. 10, approximately 60% of customers had cast their blue cups for Obama while 40% p picked the red Romney cup. 7-Eleven began counting red and blue cups Sept. 6. Of the 34 states in which 7-Eleven has stores, the president carries 31 while Romney leads in three (Idaho, West Virginia and New Hampshire).

Media pundits and “real” pollsters have identified nine key battleground states, or as 7-Eleven coined them: battle coffee-ground states—that are too close to call and key to winning the election: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin. 7-Election voters seem more decided:

7-Election Swing State Results as of Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012

STATE

BLUE-OBAMA

RED-ROMNEY

Colorado

61%

39%

Florida

56%

44%

Iowa

67%

33%

Nevada

63%

37%

New Hampshire

50%

50%

North Carolina

52%

48%

Ohio

57%

43%

Virginia

59%

41%

Wisconsin

53%

47%

 

Cup counts for Obama dropped slightly in three states the day after the first debate on Oct. 3, with the president losing a percentage point to Romney in Iowa, New Hampshire and Wisconsin.

Even more telling were the results in Denver 7-Eleven stores the day after the first presidential debate and the city where the event took place. Obama had led 58% to 42% of 7-Election cups sold up through the day of the debate. The day after the debate, the president slipped 7 percentage points to 51% versus Romney whose cup share grew to 49%.

As the U.S. presidential election swings into the final weeks and early voting begins across the country, Americans are encouraged to continue to cast their cups in the 7-Election just-for-fun presidential coffee cup poll at participating7-Eleven stores.

Throughout the first half of the 60-day voting promotion, the margin between the two candidates has mirrored the 2008 presidential election when Obama bested Sen. John McCain.

National, state and select cities appear on www.7-election.com, and 7-Eleven updates results daily. 7-Eleven operates and franchises stores in eight of the top 10 most populous markets – New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, San Francisco, Dallas-Fort Worth and Washington, D.C. with the following results:

 

7-Election Major City Results as of Oct. 10, 2012

CITY

BLUE-OBAMA

RED-ROMNEY

New York

65%

35%

Los Angeles

70%

30%

Chicago

66%

34%

Philadelphia

66%

34%

Phoenix

64%

37%

San Diego

63%

37%

Dallas

66%

34%

San Jose

65%

35%

 

7-Election percentages do not include the sale of the green-colored, large-size 7-Eleven coffee cups for the “No-Opinion/Another-Party/Undecided/None-of-Your-Business” consumers or the other sizes of 7-Eleven’s hot beverage containers.

“7-Election has never been a scientific study, so it’s anybody’s guess why the spread between the cup counts is greater than national polls, you know, the real ones,” Smith said. “7-Eleven customers are younger than the general population, and some news sources have suggested that younger voters, who communicate primarily by wireless phones rather than landlines, may be under-counted by pollsters.”

7-Eleven’s Mobile Oval vehicle continues its rolling tour. The red, white and blue bus with a miniature oval office inside was in the U.S. Capitol this weekend before this week traveling down the East Coast to Norfolk, Va. (Oct. 11); Jacksonville, Fla. (Oct. 14); Orlando (Oct. 15), Miami (Oct. 16) and Tampa (Oct. 17). The bus then moves on to Austin (Oct. 19) and other points west. Dates for future Mobile Oval stops in Colorado, Nevada, California, Washington State are posted on www.7-election.com. The Mobile Oval returns to 7-Eleven’s hometown of Dallas the day before the election. Visitors get a fun non-political experience with free coffee, free mugs and free photos in the mini-oval office.

Voting polls are open until 7 p.m. on Nov. 6, but even later at participating 7-Eleven stores. The 7-Election coffee cup poll will continue its count until midnight on Election Day, so the cup race is not over until the last drop that Tuesday night.

“We put out the cups, and our customers take it from there,” Smith said. “They are the real winners in 7-Election. Besides having some fun with this campaign, we are can raise awareness about the importance of voting in America. Every vote, like every cup, counts.”

 

 

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