Poll: 20 percent say election is an afterthought
Despite strong concern about the economy, one-fifth of Americans have paid little attention to the presidential race
Anthony Salvanto, Ph.D., is CBS News' executive director of elections and surveys. He oversees the CBS News Poll and all surveys across topics and heads the CBS News Decision Desk that estimates outcomes on election nights. Salvanto appears regularly across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms to explain and analyze CBS News polls, U.S. public opinion, voting and elections.
Salvanto is the author of "Where Did You Get This Number: A Pollster's Guide to Making Sense of the World" (published by Simon & Schuster.) He has covered all the recent presidential and midterm congressional races and Americans' opinions on major topics of the day including how they've viewed the state of the nation, the economy, democracy, and the COVID-19 pandemic; issues ranging from views on parties and partisanship, immigration, international conflicts, finances, and more, all of it aimed at offering viewers and readers a more thorough understanding of the people and nation around them.
Through the CBS News Battleground Tracker, he and the Election and Survey Unit have presented viewers with comprehensive coverage of contests across all key states and districts through large-scale surveys and data models. He has identified and shown viewers potential scenarios in presidential and congressional elections, and the key influencer groups that go beyond the typical demographic breakdowns. On election nights, Anthony presents the real-time results by taking viewers directly inside the process at the CBS News Data Desk, for unique, up-to-the-minute looks at how the Desk is analyzing the results.
Salvanto's scholarly research and writings cover topics on American politics and elections, public opinion, voting behavior, and survey research methods. He is affiliated with the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard. Salvanto's Ph.D. in political science is from the University of California, Irvine, and he earned his B.A. from Tufts University. He joined CBS News in 2002.
Despite strong concern about the economy, one-fifth of Americans have paid little attention to the presidential race
Gender gap for both candidates: Obama leads big among women, Romney among men
After delivering well-received speeches at political conventions, Michelle Obama and Ann Romney get high public opinion marks
CBS/NYT poll: Following the Republican and Democratic conventions, more view Obama positively than negatively; more still view Romney negatively
In a CBS/ NYT poll taken as the current crisis in the Middle East unfolded, Obama has advantage over Romney on foreign policy
President leads Romney by six points in Wisconsin, four points in Virginia, one point in Colorado; has gained ground on economy
President leads by 12 points in Pennsylvania, 10 in Ohio, 9 in Florida in new Quinnipiac University/CBS News/NY Times poll
A state-by-state explanation of how you can tell which candidate is doing well as you watch the returns on election night
CBS News estimates Obama has 255 electoral votes at least leaning his way, while Romney has 206 at least leaning to him
Republicans need a net gain of four seats - out of 12 battleground races - to take over the Senate
CBS News estimates Obama has 255 electoral votes at least leaning his way, while Romney has 206 at least leaning to him
The CBS News' Election Unit details the five gubernatorial races to keep an eye on this year
CBS News estimates Obama has 237 electoral votes at least leaning his way, while Romney has 206 at least leaning to him
Control of the Senate may come down to the states where ticket-splitters are key
President Obama's two-day bus tour is focused in densely-populated areas of Ohio and Pennsylvania where he needs strong turnout and big margins to win the state