Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Romney erases Obama advantage among women in new poll [ournewsa.blogspot.com]

Romney erases Obama advantage among women in new poll [ournewsa.blogspot.com]

3rd song from NIN's first album, Pretty Hate Machine.

Nine Inch Nails - Pretty Hate Machine - 03 Down In It

Mitt Romney has surged past President Obama in a new national poll that showed the Republican nominee making across-the-board gains -- including among women -- on the heels of last week's debate. 

The Pew Research Center survey depicted a remarkable swing in the numbers, with Romney climbing from an 8-point deficit last month to a 4-point lead among likely voters late last week. 

There's little question that his debate performance has played a role. A separate Gallup survey showed registered voters deemed Romney the winner by 72-20 percent, marking the biggest debate victory in Gallup's recorded history.   

The Pew poll showed a similarly big victory for Romney in the debate, and it appeared to translate into gains among several groups of voters. The Oct. 4-7 survey of 1,112 likely voters showed Romney leading 49-45 percent overall. 

But significantly, the poll also showed Romney pulling even among women, a group of voters who typically sway toward Obama. In September, the same polling outfit showed Obama leading by 18 points among women. 

Among all registered voters surveyed, the two candidates were also tied. 

With Romney making gains both nationally and in the swing states, he and President Obama were headed to the battleground of Ohio Tuesday to press their case. 

Romney has tried to broaden his message, delivering a major foreign policy speech Monday in Virginia ahead of the final two debates that will deal more with overseas affairs. 

A vice presidential debate is set for this Thursday. 

An Obama campaign official tried to downplay the results of the latest Pew poll. 

"The state of the race is what it has been, which is a close and competitive race in key states with a slight lean towards the president," the official said. 

But the Pew poll showed the trendlines working in Romney's favor, at least for now. 

His favorable rating hit 50 percent for the first time in that survey, while Obama's fell from 55 to 49 percent. 

The poll also showed voters putting more faith in Romney on issues ranging from the economy to the budget deficit. The two are even, at 44 percent each, on the question of who is the stronger leader. Obama led on that question by 13 points last month.

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