The U.S. Senate race between Republican Mark Kirk and Democrat Alexi 
			Giannoulias is a dead heat."Few states have the two top races as 
			close as those in Illinois," said David Yepsen, director of the 
			Simon Institute. "These races could turn on the smallest thing -- a 
			gaffe, the turnout efforts or unforeseen events. Every vote will be 
			important." 
			Charles Leonard, the Simon Institute visiting professor who 
			supervised the poll, said: "Our results appear to be in line with 
			other recent surveys, in that Bill Brady holds a single-digit lead 
			over Pat Quinn. Similarly, the Simon Poll shows the U.S. Senate race 
			remains a virtual tie between Alexi Giannoulias and Mark Kirk. 
			
			
			  
			"Taken as a whole, these recent Illinois polls demonstrate that 
			the governor's race is more volatile and that opinions in the Senate 
			race are more hardened and are more difficult to move. That there 
			are still 1 in 5 voters saying they are undecided adds to the air of 
			uncertainty about both these races," Leonard said. 
			Yepsen said the poll is good news for Republican Brady. 
			"Brady leads Quinn, who had been closing in on him in other 
			recent polls. Also, the survey shows Republicans are more excited 
			about this election," Yepsen said. 
			In the race for governor, Brady is capturing 38.4 percent of the 
			vote to Quinn's 29.8 percent. Independent candidate Scott Lee Cohen 
			captures 5.9 percent, and Green Party candidate Rich Whitney garners 
			2.2 percent. Libertarian candidate Lex Green is at 1.5 percent. 
			There are 22.1 percent who are undecided or who favor another 
			candidate. 
			In the Senate contest, Kirk has 37.3 percent and Giannoulias has 
			36.8 percent. Green Party candidate LeAlan Jones has 3.3 percent and 
			Libertarian Mike Labno has 1.8 percent. There are 20.7 percent who 
			are undecided or who favor another candidate. 
			
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			 The survey of 1,000 registered voters was taken Sept. 30 to Oct. 
			10 and has a margin of error of 3 percentage points. It found 758 
			who were classified as likely voters. Few polls of the Illinois 
			contests have sample sizes as large as this one. The margin for 
			error among likely voters is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. 
			The numbers in this release are those for likely voters. 
			Results from the entire sample have a statistical margin for 
			error of 3 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level. 
			This means that if the survey were to be conducted 100 times, in 95 
			of those instances the results would vary by no more than plus or 
			minus 3 points from the results obtained here. The margin for error 
			will be larger for demographic, geographic and response subgroups. 
			Likely voters are respondents who passed a two-question "screen": 
			first, that they were absolutely certain to vote, and second, that 
			they knew exactly where their polling place was. 
			[Text from
			
			poll report from the 
			Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois 
			University Carbondale] 
			
			  
			
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