Over the last 40 national surveys, Mr. Romney is at or above 50% in 11, with Mr. Obama at or above 50% in one
This year's
presidential election was transformed between the first debate's opening
statements in Denver and the closing statements in Boca Raton. As a
result, most of the negative impressions created by the Obama campaign's
five-month, $300-million television advertising barrage were destroyed.
Seen unfiltered, Gov. Mitt Romney came across as an earnest,
straightforward, thoughtful conservative with a concrete plan for the
nation's future.
Wednesday's RealClearPolitics.com
average of polls showed Mr. Romney with 48% support to President Barack
Obama's 47.1%. On the eve of the Denver debate, Mr. Romney had 46% and
Mr. Obama 49.1%.
More revealing, in the past week's 40
national surveys, Mr. Romney was at or above 50% in 11, with Mr. Obama
at or above 50% in one. Mr. Romney leads 48.9% to 46.7% in an average of
these surveys. At this same point in 2004, President George W. Bush led
Sen. John Kerry in this composite average, 48.9% to 45.8%.
So what are each candidate's strategies for the stretch run?
New television spots reveal the Romney
campaign's closing message. One says another four years for Mr. Obama
would mean more debt, up to 20 million people losing their
employer-provided health insurance, higher taxes, rising energy prices
and Medicare cuts. Other ads emphasize Mr. Romney has a plan for jobs
and showcase his success as a Republican governor in a Democratic state.
Reuters
President Barack Obama
This
three-part strategy—matter-of-factly indict Mr. Obama's failed policies,
highlight a common-sense conservative agenda to create jobs and growth,
and stress Mr. Romney's capacity to provide bipartisan leadership—was
evident in all three of his debate performances.
The Obama campaign strategy also has
three elements. The first was embodied in a glossy 20-page pamphlet
issued Tuesday, entitled "The New Economic Patriotism: A Plan for Jobs
& Middle-Class Security." Mr. Obama is distributing 3.5 million
copies of it nationwide but it is too late: Voters concluded months ago
that he lacks a forward-looking program. The pamphlet itself is a
second-rate repackaging of Mr. Obama's lackluster convention speech and
has been rightly dismissed by many in the press as a PR ploy. Even an
accompanying TV ad swing won't rescue Mr. Obama.
The second strategic thrust of the
Obama message was exemplified in three TV ads released on Tuesday. They
warn that Mr. Romney would end all abortion, gut Medicare, and undermine
education. But this repeats months of similar messaging, so it is hard
to believe that it will undo Mr. Romney's current momentum.
The final element of Mr. Obama's
strategy is to constantly question Mr. Romney's truthfulness. The
president says his opponent suffers from "stage-three Romnesia," as if
the GOP challenger were a disease. While calling his opponent a liar
thrills partisans, Mr. Obama risks turning off swing voters, especially
since Mr. Romney's favorability rating is now higher than his own.
In an Oct. 21 Monmouth/SurveyUSA/Braun
poll of registered voters, Mr. Romney was viewed favorably by 49% and
unfavorably by 39%, up from 41% favorable and 40% unfavorable on Sept.
16.
The president's problem remains the
economy. Facts belie his argument that it is largely healed. Rather, it
is producing jobs at a slower rate than last year, generating an average
of 131,000 a month so far in 2012. At that rate, it will take three
years just to get employment back where it was when the recession
started, 138 million. Meanwhile, approximately four million to five
million more Americans will have entered the workforce without jobs.
Voters are uneasy and disapprove of Mr. Obama's economic stewardship.
This race will be close, depending on a
few states. The good news for Mr. Romney is that the ones he needs are
breaking his way. He leads in most recent polls in Florida, North
Carolina, Virginia, New Hampshire and Colorado.
That puts the former Massachusetts
governor at 261 in the Electoral College with Iowa, Michigan, Nevada,
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and the great prize, Ohio, still up for grabs.
In those states, Mr. Obama has at best a thin edge, while Mr. Romney has
momentum, a stronger argument, and time to grab the nine additional
electoral votes he needs.
An incumbent president's final number
in opinion polls is often his Election Day share of his vote. Undecided
voters generally swing the challenger's way. So if Mr. Obama goes into
Nov. 6 below 50% in these states—as he now is in almost every one—he is
likely to lose them and his chance at a second term.
Mr. Rove, a former deputy chief of staff to
President George W. Bush, helped organize the political action committee
American Crossroads.
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