The poll you quoted says that there's a drop in Democrats that are "more enthusiastic than usual". It doesn't say anything about a rise in Democrats who are less enthusiastic.

And you're doing it again. Relying on statistics and the media.

Let me tell you something, Roy. Statistics don't lie, but liars do use statistics. It's easy to make a poll go the way you want.

Let me give you an example. One infamous poll during the 1932 campaign predicted that Hoover would win re-election - by a landslide. No-one believed it, of course, and when F.D.R won hands-down, the magazine that took the poll insisted that it had done a thorough and honest poll.

Actually, they hadn't. The poll had been conducted by telephone, using car registration numbers to choose the participants. In 1932, the height of the Great Depression, nearly everyone who owned a car and a phone was rich, white, and a Republican.

Starting to see what I mean about how statistics don't lie, but liars do use statistics?