From October 28, 2006:
KARL ROVE: I see several things; first, unlike the general public, I'm allowed to see the polls on the individual races and after all this does come down to individual contests between individual candidates. Second of all, I see the individual spending reports and contribution reports. For example at the end of August in 30 of the most competitive races in the country, the house races, the Republicans had 33 million cash on hand and Democrats had just over 14 million.
Siegel asked next about television advertising and their content. Then he came back to the topic of polls.
SIEGEL: We are in the home stretch though and many would consider you on the optimistic end of realism about...
ROVE: Not that you would be exhibiting a bias or anything like that, you're just making a comment, right?
SIEGEL: I'm looking at all the same polls that you are looking at.
ROVE: No, you are not, no you're not, no you're not, you're not. I'm looking at 68 polls a week ** You may be looking at 4 or 5 public polls a week that talk about attitudes nationally but that do not impact the outcome of individual races.
SIEGEL: If you could name races between, certainly Senate races, all...
ROVE: Like the poll today that showing Corker's ahead in Tennessee or the poll showing Allen is pulling away in the Virginia Senate race.
SIEGEL: Leading Webb, in Virginia, yea...
ROVE: Yeah, exactly.
SIEGEL: ...you've seen the DeWine race and the Santorum race and, I don't want to...you call races.
ROVE: I'm looking at all of these Robert and adding them up. I add up to a Republican Senate and Republican House. You may end up with a different math but you are entitled to your math and I'm entitled to THE math.
SIEGEL: I don't know if we're entitled to a different math but your...
ROVE: I said THE math
http://www.pollster.com/blogs/karl_roves_math.php