The latest
Purple Poll, a survey of key swing states conducted for a
bipartisan political consulting firm, shows a close, stable
presidential race with a fairly small pool of undecided voters. It
also suggests, not surprisingly, that the voters who will decide
this election don’t much like either Barack Obama or Mitt
Romney.
Across the 12 purple states, Obama leads Romney by a razor-thin
47 percent to 45 percent. That’s unchanged from June and within the
margin of error. Romney has a 5-point lead among these states’
independents. He leads among men by 8 points but trails Obama among
women by 11 points. The percentage of voters who say that the
economy is getting worse is up to 42 percent. The pollsters found
that this is an even bigger predictor of how people will vote than
party identification: swing staters who thought the economy was
getting better broke 93 percent to 4 percent for Obama, those who
thought it was getting worse prefer Romney 84 percent to 7
percent.
In individual states, Ohio has swung narrowly back to Obama,
Romney leads in Florida, and both Colorado and Virginia are very
tight. All states are within the margin of error, Obama is below 50
percent in every one of them. While everyone is talking about the
Romney campaign’s struggles answering the Bain questions, it bears
watching whether this controversy actually moves the needle in any
of these states.
The poll also reveals a split on the two fundamental questions
of this election: whether Obama is a failed president or Romney is
too out of touch to succeed him. Purple state voters as a whole
split 44 percent each on which statement they agreed with most, but
there was variation among the several states. In Florida, 50
percent say Obama is a failure, 41 percent say Romney is too out of
touch, and 9 percent aren’t sure. In Ohio, 46 percent say Romney is
too out of touch, 45 percent say Obama is a failure, and 9 percent
aren’t sure.
This very similar to the breakdown on who would do better
improving the economy and jobs outlook. In Florida, 50 percent say
Obama is unable to improve the economy, 40 percent say Romney can’t
do any better, and 10 percent aren’t sure. But in Ohio, 46 percent
say Romney won’t do better than Obama, 45 percent say Obama can’t
improve the economy, and 9 percent aren’t sure.
In the final analysis, these numbers contain a lot of good and
bad news for both candidates while painting a picture of a deeply
polarized, unhappy electorate.
Ryan| 7.16.12 @ 4:55PM
I'm thinking we'll see a lot of either stay-at-home or leaning Romney near the end on those numbers. I even wonder if Romney may sneak a surprise state out somehow.
Jake| 7.16.12 @ 7:43PM
Well, it looks like Obama has fiscally mismanaged his campaign war chest as he does with all things.
All that wasted cash on ads that didn't change a thing.
Romney has marshalled his money for the fall ,
like a good businessman does.
Romney also has the future advantage of a VP choice that will change the dynamic...unless it's Condi Rice ....
Obama is stuck with Old Joe.
Lily123 | 7.17.12 @ 4:18AM
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