A new PPP poll puts Mitt Romney ahead of President Obama 49% to 47%. While this is a statistical tie, this is the first PPP poll this year showing Romney ahead. Especially noteworthy is that Obama's lead among women has dropped from 15 points to only 6 points. Most of the polling was conducted Friday, at the height of Romney's debate bounce.
A new Gallup tracking poll of likely voters also shows Romney with a 2-point lead nationally. Together with the PPP and Pew polls, now three national polls put Romney in the lead. However, as we have pointed out before, in politics, a week is a long time. There is a vice-presidential debate tomorrow and two more presidential debates down the road.
Obama's response to his precipitous drop in the polls is to stop fundraising and go into campaign mode full time. He raised $181 million in September and probably does not need any more money, but he does need to talk to the voters.
In an obvious play for women's votes, Romney said yesterday that, as President, he would not pursue any new legislation concerning abortion. This position is in contrast to what he has been saying all year in order to woo pro-life voters. He is counting on people not remembering his earlier positions. This change is what his advisor Erik Fehrnstrom meant by shaking the Etch-a-Sketch. Fehrstrom felt that Romney could completely change his positions on taxes, abortion, and anything else that was inconvenient near the end of the campaign and hardly anybody would notice.
Last week a three judge panel of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Ohio cannot have the polls open the weekend before election day just for military families. Everyone has to be allowed to vote. Yesterday, Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted (R) announced that he will appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. Husted claims that he has the sole authority to determine the opening times of polls in Ohio and the federal courts have no authority to challenge his decisions. Democrats say that this is a naked attempt to suppress the votes of minorities, many of whom cannot take Tuesdays off to vote, so they normally vote the weekend before the election. The three-judge panel agreed with the Democrats and said the state has no compelling reason to allow one class of voter to have extra voting days. Since Husted's plan keeps the polls open on the weekend, the state can't argue this is an economy measure.
It is far from certain that the Supreme Court will even take the case. The justices probably do not want to be put in a position where their decision could determine the outcome of another presidential election. None of them have forgotten what happened in Florida in 2000. Chief Justice John Roberts, in particular, is very concerned about maintaining respect for the Court and realizes that thrusting it into the middle of another election would be very controversial. There is also a good chance that if he turns down the appeal, the Democrats will be very happy with him for the moment, giving him the ability to vote with the conservatives on the court for years to come and later claiming that sometimes he supports the conservative position and sometimes he doesn't.
The word "Congress" was uttered only four times during the presidential debate last week. Given that Vice President Joe Biden and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) have a combined total of 53 years of ties to that body, it is probably a safe bet the subject will come up in their debate tomorrow.
In addition, some of the big issues facing the country, especially Medicare, will be fought out in Congress and are expected to dominate the debate. Democrats are looking forward to this since virtually every poll on the subject has shown that the voters do not want to change the way Medicare works and Ryan is the author of a plan that replaces it with a voucher system.
Earlier this year it looked like the Republicans were very likely to capture the Senate because the Democrats were defending 23 seats to the Republicans 10. However, separate events in multiple states have changed the picture. In Indiana, a tea party candidate knocked off a long-term incumbent and changed what would have been a Republican rout into a close race. In North Dakota and Arizona, the Democrats put up surprisingly good campaigners, and so on. The Washington Post has a story on the top 10 most competitive Senate races. Below is a table giving the most recent poll in each race. Democrats are defending seats in Connecticut, Montana, North Dakota, Virginia, and Wisconsin. The Republicans are defending the others. Incumbents are marked with an asterisk.
State | Democrat | D % | Republican | R % | I | I % | Start | End | Pollster |
Arizona | Richard Carmona | 45% | Jeff Flake | 43% | Oct 01 | Oct 03 | PPP | ||
Connecticut | Chris Murphy | 51% | Linda McMahon | 46% | Oct 07 | Oct 07 | Rasmussen | ||
Indiana | Joe Donnelly | 40% | Richard Mourdock | 38% | Sep 19 | Sep 23 | Howey-DePauw | ||
Maine | Cynthia Dill | 14% | Charlie Summers | 33% | Angus King | 45% | Sep 25 | Sep 25 | Rasmussen |
Massachusetts | Elizabeth Warren | 45% | Scott Brown* | 48% | Oct 05 | Oct 07 | MassINC | ||
Montana | Jon Tester* | 44% | Denny Rehberg | 42% | Sep 23 | Sep 25 | Global Strategy | ||
Nevada | Shelley Berkley | 43% | Dean Heller* | 49% | Sep 23 | Sep 25 | Marist Coll. | ||
North Dakota | Heidi Heitkamp | 47% | Rick Berg | 47% | Oct 03 | Oct 05 | Mason Dixon | ||
Virginia | Tim Kaine | 51% | George Allen | 44% | Oct 04 | Oct 07 | PPP | ||
Wisconsin | Tammy Baldwin | 48% | Tommy Thompson | 46% | Sep 16 | Sep 18 | Marist Coll. |
Latino Decisions, a firm specialized in polling Latino voters in English and Spanish, has just released a new poll of Arizona Latinos and found that Obama leads Romney by 80% to 14% in Arizona. While no one expects Obama to win the state, a large Latino turnout would be of enormous help to Democratic Senate candidate Richard Carmona, who leads Rep. Jeff Flake (R-AZ) by a margin of 75% to 12% in the same poll. Carmona, a Vietnam veteran who served as George W. Bush's Surgeon General, is of Puerto Rican descent. If Carmona wins, the chance of the Republicans capturing the Senate are dim at best. Early in the year few observers expected this race to be close, but Carmona has run a flawless campaign and Arizona's law that allows police to stop anyone who they suspect of being an illegal immigrant has enflamed the Latino community in the state.
On election day, voters in four states will determine if same-sex marriages will be allowed in their States. In Maryland, Maine, and Washington state, the voters are going to be asked if they want to legalize marriages between same-sex couples. In Minnesota they are being asked if they want to ban these marriages.
The state most likely to approve same-sex marriage is Maine, where polls show it is leading 57% to 36%. Washington is not far behind, with 51% approving and 37% disapproving. In Maryland, 49% support the idea and 39% oppose it. The Minnesota ballot measure is close, with the most recent poll showing 47% opposed to the measure and 48% supporting it.
Also of note is that polls in Florida, Ohio, and Virginia show that if a referendum allowing same-sex marriage were on the ballot (which it is not this year), it would pass. The change with 8 years ago is striking. In that year, the Republicans got a referendum on the subject on the ballot in many states, largely to get older, conservative voters to the polls. Now the reverse seems to be true. The measures are likely to attract younger, liberal voters to the polls.
The national polls showing a large debate bump for Mitt Romney are now starting to filter down to the state polls. Romney is shooting up in Colorado, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The map does not fully reflect the post-debate situation because the algorithm averages all polls going back a week, which includes polls with some data collected before the debate. Within a few days, however, we should have a better picture of how much damage Obama sustained from his poor debate performance.
State | Obama | Romney | Start | End | Pollster | |
Colorado | 46% | 50% | Oct 05 | Oct 08 | ARG | |
Connecticut | 51% | 45% | Oct 07 | Oct 07 | Rasmussen | |
Massachusetts | 52% | 36% | Oct 05 | Oct 07 | MassINC | |
Massachusetts | 55% | 34% | Oct 02 | Oct 08 | U. of Mass. | |
Massachusetts | 63% | 33% | Sep 28 | Oct 04 | Western New England U. | |
Minnesota | 53% | 43% | Oct 05 | Oct 08 | PPP | |
New Hampshire | 47% | 41% | Sep 30 | Oct 06 | U. of New Hampshire | |
Nevada | 47% | 47% | Oct 08 | Oct 08 | Rasmussen | |
Ohio | 45% | 44% | Oct 06 | Oct 08 | SurveyUSA | |
Ohio | 47% | 48% | Oct 05 | Oct 08 | ARG | |
Ohio | 51% | 47% | Oct 05 | Oct 08 | ORC International | |
Pennsylvania | 43% | 40% | Oct 01 | Oct 05 | Siena Coll. | |
Wisconsin | 49% | 47% | Oct 04 | Oct 06 | PPP |
State | Democrat | D % | Republican | R % | I | I % | Start | End | Pollster |
Connecticut | Chris Murphy | 51% | Linda McMahon | 46% | Oct 07 | Oct 07 | Rasmussen | ||
Massachusetts | Elizabeth Warren | 45% | Scott Brown* | 48% | Oct 05 | Oct 07 | MassINC | ||
Massachusetts | Elizabeth Warren | 48% | Scott Brown* | 45% | Oct 02 | Oct 08 | U. of Mass. | ||
Michigan | Debbie Stabenow* | 55% | Pete Hoekstra | 35% | Oct 04 | Oct 06 | EPIC MRA | ||
Minnesota | Amy Klobuchar* | 57% | Kurt Bills | 31% | Oct 05 | Oct 08 | PPP | ||
Pennsylvania | Bob Casey* | 44% | Tom Smith | 35% | Oct 01 | Oct 05 | Siena Coll. |