More Republicans than Democrats are registering and voting early in several battleground states.
How big an impact did
Mitt Romney's performance in last week's debate have? Huge. Mr. Romney
not only won the night, he changed the arc of the election—and perhaps
its outcome. Surveys have him leading the RealClearPolitics average of
polls for the first time since securing the GOP nomination in mid-April.
Prior to Oct. 3, Mr. Romney trailed
President Barack Obama by an average of 3.1 points in national polls
tallied by RealClearPolitics. Since the debate, Mr. Romney now leads Mr.
Obama in the RCP average by a point, 48.2% to 47.2%, and the bounce is
likely to grow. By comparison, Sen. John Kerry was widely seen to have
bested President George W. Bush in the first 2004 debate (held on Sept.
30 of that year), but he never led in the RCP average in October.
In seven of the past nine presidential
debate series, the challenger has gained more in the polls than the
incumbent (or the candidate of the party in power). The first debate
generally frames the series and establishes whether the bounce will be
large or modest. Mr. Romney's bounce is significant.
It's unlikely that Mr. Obama will do as
poorly next Tuesday at Hofstra University in New York. His supporters
are demanding that he be more aggressive. He will be, telling AM radio's
Tom Joyner on Wednesday that he'd been "too polite" in the first
debate.
But if the president is as angry and
negative in the Oct. 16 debate as he has been on the campaign trail the
past week, he will damage himself again. It's hard in a town-hall format
like next week's to attack, and too easy to come across as mean and
nasty. Also, alleging that Mr. Romney is a serial deceiver—as the
president and top advisers are doing—is a hard sell. Mr. Romney came
across last week as practical and thoughtful, authentic and a straight
shooter.
A record 72% in the Oct. 8 Gallup
survey said he won the debate, compared with 20% who thought Mr. Obama
did. Voters would not have awarded such a lopsided victory to a liar.
AFP/Getty Images
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney
An Oct. 7
Pew Research report found that before the debate, Romney voters were
four points more likely than Obama voters to give the election "a lot of
thought." After it, Romney-voter engagement was 15 points higher than
that of Obama voters. This enthusiasm gap already expresses itself in
voter registration and is now influencing early voting.
In the eight battleground states that
register voters by party, Republicans have maintained their advantage or
cut into the Democrats' in all but one (Nevada). Since September 2008,
Republicans have kept their registration advantages in Colorado and New
Hampshire. They've added more new Republican registrations than
Democrats did in Florida, Iowa and North Carolina. And they've lost
fewer voters from the rolls than Democrats did in New Mexico and
Pennsylvania.
About Karl Rove
Karl Rove served as Senior Advisor to President
George W. Bush from 2000–2007 and Deputy Chief of Staff from 2004–2007.
At the White House he oversaw the Offices of Strategic Initiatives,
Political Affairs, Public Liaison, and Intergovernmental Affairs and was
Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, coordinating the White House
policy-making process.
Before Karl became known as "The Architect" of
President Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaigns, he was president of Karl Rove +
Company, an Austin-based public affairs firm that worked for Republican
candidates, nonpartisan causes, and nonprofit groups. His clients
included over 75 Republican U.S. Senate, Congressional and gubernatorial
candidates in 24 states, as well as the Moderate Party of Sweden.
Karl writes a weekly op-ed for the Wall Street
Journal, is a Fox News Contributor and is the author of the book
"Courage and Consequence" (Threshold Editions).
Email the author at
Karl@Rove.comor visit him on the web at
Rove.com. Or, you can send a Tweet to @karlrove.
Click here to order his new book,
Courage and Consequence.
Republicans are
also getting the better of Mr. Obama in early voting. In 2008,
Democrats made up 51% of the North Carolina early vote while Republicans
were 30%. This year, Republicans have cast 54% of the ballots returned
so far, Democrats only 28%, according to state data compiled by George
Mason University's Michael McDonald for his United States Election
Project.
In Florida, 46% of absentee ballots
returned by September's end came from Republicans (compared with 37% in
2008) while just 38% came from Democrats (they were 46% of the total in
2008). More Republicans have requested absentee ballots in Colorado, a
state where Democrats edged out Republicans in early voting last time.
Republicans have also made up ground in
Ohio. For example, in 2008 Democrats requested 5% more absentee ballots
in Franklin County (Columbus), 4% more in Greene County (Xenia), and
11% more in Wood County (Bowling Green). This election, Republicans have
more ballot requests than Democrats in these counties by 5%, 19% and 1%
respectively.
The Romney campaign saw a $12 million
surge in online contributions following the debate, and major GOP
fundraisers are again opening their checkbooks. True enough, Hollywood
stars and rich San Francisco liberals wrote big checks during Mr.
Obama's two-day California swing this week. But it isn't clear what
overall impact the president's poor debate performance will have on his
fundraising. The small Internet donors that produced an eye-popping $181
million fundraising total in September may be disappointed in his
debate skills and waiting to see if he improves.
During the GOP primary, one of Mr.
Romney's chief selling points was his skill as a debater. He picked a
powerful moment to display this strength. The debate at the University
of Denver qualifies as among the most consequential in history. It might
end up as the election's decision point.
Mr. Rove, a former deputy chief of
staff to President George W. Bush, helped organize the political action
committee American Crossroads. He is the author of "Courage and
Consequence" (Threshold Editions, 2010)
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