The re-election of Barack Obama may well be back on. After watching the economy tank and the president struggling to make his promised sweeping reforms, many American swing voters were in a state of intense deliberation — Obama 2.0 or something new?
But the economic picture is improving – and while jobs continue to be created and unemployment falls, the Republicans are involved in bitter exchanges and political gaffes, leaving Obama’s opinion ratings continually improving.
Dana Milbank recently wrote in the Washington Post that:
While Romney embraces the birther billionaire Donald Trump, he has ceded to Obama the political center. The day after Romney indelicately announced that he was “not concerned about the very poor,” Obama spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast about his affection for the Rev. Billy Graham and about “the biblical call to care for the least of these — for the poor; for those at the margins of our society.
It now seems that the Obama campaign is gaining momentum in the areas that matter most — key swing states.
Fox News conducted a poll late on Wednesday. It analyses voters in 10 battleground states — Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Florida, North Carolina and Virginia and it would seem that in those states, which are key to his chances of re-election, he is performing better than the Republican alternatives.
Dana Blanton at Fox News explains:
The swing-state voters back Obama over Romney by 8 percentage points and Santorum by 9 points.
Obama tops Paul by 12 points in the poll. Gingrich lags farthest behind Obama, as voters in these key states prefer the president to the former Speaker by 20 points.
Chris Stirewalt adds:
It’s getting harder for Republicans to argue that their protracted nomination process isn’t doing serious damage to their chances of unseating President Obama in the fall.
The latest FOX News swing state poll has some sobering news for the Republicans. Not only do both of their current frontrunners, Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney, trail nationally (Romney trails by 5 points in all states, Santorum by 12), but they lose in the 10 key states that are likely to decide the election.
It is arguably Romney’s poll demise which is most striking. A few weeks ago Romney appeared to be the the certain winner of the Republican nomination race. The data now suggests a very different story. In states such as Florida, where Republican voters tend to consider themselves as moderates, he does just fine. But among the Republican core voters, he is treated with suspicion. Rick Santorum, who was seen as lagging behind before his recent wins, is now arguably the most viable winner of the GOP race.
On the Guardian website Michael Cohen explains pointing to two polls that paint a bleak picture for Romney and give hope to his Republican rival Rick Santorum:
What should be most daunting for Romney is the Rasmussen and PPP polls track likely voters, rather than simply registered voters. Romney’s polling numbers within the GOP remain where they’ve been for much of the year – around 25-35% support, and rarely much higher.
To beat an incumbent, the stars need to be clearly aligned in one’s favor. There is very little to date that suggests this is the case for Mitt Romney.
He remains the Republican candidate who Republicans might support if they have to – but that guy in the sweater vest seems like he might be more fun.