Author Topic: Obama currently in the lead.....  (Read 470 times)

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Offline Cuts Crooked

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Obama currently in the lead.....
« on: May 27, 2012, 03:51:00 PM »
....but not by much:
http://news.yahoo.com/warning-signs-obama-path-electoral-votes-153258403.html
  President Barack Obama faces new warning signs in a once-promising Southern state and typically Democratic-voting Midwestern states roughly five months before the election even as he benefits nationally from encouraging economic news.
Obama's new worries about North Carolina and Wisconsin offer opportunities for Republican Mitt Romney, who must peel off states Obama won in 2008 if he's to cobble together the 270 electoral votes needed to oust the incumbent in November.
Iowa, which kicked off the campaign in January, is now expected to be tight to the finish, while New Mexico, thought early to be pivotal, seems to be drifting into Democratic territory.
If the election were today, Obama would likely win 247 electoral votes to Romney's 206, according to an Associated Press analysis of polls, ad spending and key developments in states, along with interviews with more than a dozen Republican and Democratic strategists both inside and outside of the two campaigns.
Seven states, offering a combined 85 electoral votes, are viewed as too close to give either candidate a meaningful advantage: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio and Virginia.
"As of today, the advantage still lies with the president, but there is a long and hard road ahead in this election," said Tad Devine, who was a top strategist to Democratic presidential candidates Al Gore and John Kerry but isn't directly involved in this year's race.
If Romney wins all the states Republican John McCain carried in 2008 plus North Carolina, as trends today suggest he would, he would still need 64 electoral votes to hit the magic number. That would require him to win a majority of the states that are up for grabs.
Obama, on the other hand, faces the costly and labor-intensive challenge of defending those states in a much different environment than the one he enjoyed four years ago.
Big-spending, pro-Romney political committees are certain to be a factor, and already are running heavy levels of television ads in states where Obama is vulnerable, such as Florida.
But Obama's early spending — more than $30 million on advertising before Memorial Day — and new glimmers of economic hope across the battleground states demonstrate the size of Romney's challenge.
The race is expected to be close, and the past six weeks have been volatile.
North Carolina is a case in point.
Obama announced his support for gay marriage on May 9, one day after 60 percent of North Carolina voters approved a constitutional ban. "That issue definitely hurts him down there," said veteran Republican presidential campaign strategist Charlie Black, a top aide to 2008 nominee McCain. Black's not directly involved in this year's race but is an informal adviser to Romney.
North Carolina's high African American and young voter population, keys to Obama's 2008 wins there, give him the edge, aides say. And the president so far has spent heavily there, $2.7 million on television, according to reports provided to the AP.
But Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue gave Republicans an opening by not seeking re-election this year. And union leaders, a key Democratic constituency, are upset that this summer's Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., is being held in a state where union rights are weak.
In Wisconsin, embattled Republican Gov. Scott Walker's improving fortunes as a contentious June 5 recall election approaches could alter that state's landscape. Walker, who sparked mass protests by signing anti-union legislation last year, has pulled narrowly ahead of Democratic Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in recent polls.
If Walker survives, Romney aides say they have a real chance to carry Wisconsin, which no Republican has done since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
"I don't think there's been any better dress rehearsal for a presidential election than what's going on in Wisconsin right now," said Rich Beeson, political director for the former Massachusetts governor.
Indeed, the Wisconsin recall could signal a GOP shift in an arc of states from Iowa to Pennsylvania that have reliably voted Democratic in presidential elections for a generation.
"Whether Walker wins or doesn't is going to be a big indicator of how Wisconsin goes, and how the whole upper Midwest goes," said Iowa's Republican Gov. Terry Branstad.
Romney has signaled plans to contest Iowa, where Obama's 2008 caucus win propelled him to the Democratic nomination. Romney also sees opportunity in his native Michigan, where Democratic presidential candidates have won since 1988.
Bright spots are developing for Obama, too.
Public polls this month showed the president narrowly ahead in Virginia, a Southern state Republicans had carried nine times before Obama won it in 2008. Obama's advantage among Latino voters is moving New Mexico his way. Neither campaign nor the super PACs have advertised there, despite close finishes in 2000 and 2004.
Obama also has seized on new economic data that could give him a lift across the contested map. April unemployment ticked downward in all of the up-for-grabs states except Colorado as Obama and Romney have fought over who is best equipped to lead an economic recovery.
In Des Moines, Iowa, this month, Romney blamed Obama's spending for the recovery's slow pace. A week later, on the other side of town, Obama said Romney's career as a private equity executive was more suited for the boardroom than the Oval Office.
Obama's attack dovetails with scathing ads on Romney's career at the head of Bain Capital, which ran briefly in Colorado, Iowa, Pennsylvania and Virginia. They remained on the air last week in Ohio, where Obama aides say Romney's opposition to the auto industry bailout in 2009 hurts him with workers in the region's auto manufacturing sector.
Obama has had an edge in getting out his message. For nearly two months, his campaign has aired spots across 11 states, heaviest in Florida, Iowa, Ohio and Virginia, according to the ad-tracking reports.
Romney has only been airing ads for two weeks in four states. But super PACs that support him have helped shave Obama's advertising edge, airing $10 million in ads across 10 states.
Obama aides point to an edge in state-by-state organizing that could be the deciding factor in a close election. While Romney is quickly arranging with the Republican National Committee to deploy staff to various battlegrounds, Obama's campaign has been up and running for years.
Said Democratic strategist Devine: "The president and his campaign have a real and potentially decisive advantage on the ground."
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Offline mcbammer

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #1 on: May 27, 2012, 04:12:38 PM »
40%   of    union    workers    vote   Republican .  I  see   this   election   coming   down  to   one   state , like  Bush  /  Gore  thats   Florida  .

Offline Alaska Dave

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #2 on: May 27, 2012, 04:33:35 PM »
I see Obie chasing the minority vote, the welfare vote, the illegal vote and the same idiots that voted for his sorry azz the first disaster ::) ::) ::)  What a train wreck he's made.
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Offline nomosendero

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #3 on: May 27, 2012, 05:01:26 PM »
Yes & as late as July/August in the Reagan/Carter race Carter supposedly was ahead. The incumbant should be way ahead right now, but these polls don't mean much in May.
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Offline powderman

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #4 on: May 27, 2012, 05:21:24 PM »
I see Obie chasing the minority vote, the welfare vote, the illegal vote and the same idiots that voted for his sorry azz the first disaster ::) ::) ::)  What a train wreck he's made.

 
ALASKA DAVE. YEP, add to that the pro death crowd, the anti Christians, the anti military, and the pervert vote and they all add up. POWDERMAN.  >:( >:(
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Offline magooch

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #5 on: May 28, 2012, 05:10:56 AM »
Alaska Dave is right on.
Swingem

Offline KIMBER45

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #6 on: May 28, 2012, 09:14:45 AM »
If Obama wins the election, the Republican Party only has themselves to blame. This election should have been a slam dunk for the Republican Party, but no; they have to mess things up .  :o
"In the final analysis, it is between you and God.  It was never between you and them anyway."__Mother Theresa
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Offline Alaska Dave

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #7 on: May 28, 2012, 11:35:58 AM »
If Obama wins the election, the Republican Party only has themselves to blame. This election should have been a slam dunk for the Republican Party, but no; they have to mess things up .  :o

It's a shame that the republican party couldn't come up with anything better than Romney. He's almost as bad as Obie but not quite as bad  ;) ;)
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Offline nomosendero

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #8 on: May 28, 2012, 03:47:44 PM »
If Obama wins the election, the Republican Party only has themselves to blame. This election should have been a slam dunk for the Republican Party, but no; they have to mess things up .  :o

It's a shame that the republican party couldn't come up with anything better than Romney. He's almost as bad as Obie but not quite as bad  ;) ;)

I didn't vote for Romney last week & I won't until Nov & only then if there is no VIABLE 3rd choice & it appears there won't be. Yes Alaska Dave, it's a shame. :-[
 
Romney is bad, but not the crap that obummer is. I have seen no evidence as yet that he is a Racist or hates America. But he is a weak suck Lib.
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Offline mcwoodduck

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Re: Obama currently in the lead.....
« Reply #9 on: May 28, 2012, 04:41:08 PM »
The polls are always skewed for the Democrat.
There is alos the "Bradley" effect.
Bradley was running for Mayor of LA and the polls had people saying he was ahead by 10 or more points and ended up looseing by a large margin.  They figured it was that the people being polled did not want to seem racist in voting against him.
We also Have the Media trying to get him re ellected.  They would not report news that was unfavorable to him.  Thye try to get the morons that do not know to jump on the band wagon for who they think is going to win.  Much like in a football game.  If you are told one team is going to win youtend to root for them.  Everyone wants ot say they picked the winner.