Obama grabs wide lead among those who have already voted: Reuters/Ipsos poll (Reuters) - President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are neck and neck in opinion polls, but there is one area in which the incumbent appears to have a big advantage: those who have already cast their ballots. Obama leads Romney by 59 percent to 31 percent among early voters, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling data compiled in recent weeks.
Are you a bot or something? WTF does that have to do with my observation? Does every comment by anyone and everyone on the election just absolutely require a pro Obama response from you? Relevant or not. Oh...and I didn't see but maybe two potential Obama loons waiting to vote out of maybe a hundred people.
You angry Luke LOL !!! My post was related to your post BTW,you started conversing with me first today.We can both put each other on ignore if you dont like my post Luke
Please put me on ignore you fucking dolt. I already have your sorry ass on ignore and don't care to see anyone else quoting statements from you directed at me.
1 hour ago Salt Lake Tribune throws support behind Obama Posted by CNN's Dana Davidsen (CNN) â The Salt Lake Tribune announced in an editorial published Friday its endorsement of President Barack Obama for the 2012 race, questioning the "pragmatic, inclusive" former Massachusetts governor's change into Republican nominee Mitt Romney. "The president has earned a second term. Romney, in whatever guise, does not deserve a first," the Utah newspaper said in the editorial. "The Salt Lake Tribune editorial board had hoped that Romney would exhibit the same talents for organization, pragmatic problem-solving and inspired leadership that he displayed here more than a decade ago," said the Tribune. "Instead, we have watched him morph into a friend of the far right, then tack toward the center with breathtaking aplomb. Through a pair of presidential debates, Romney's domestic agenda remains bereft of detail and worthy of mistrust." Of more importance, the paper said, was Romney's lack of clarity and specifics on his proposal to reduce the deficit, asserting that GOP nominee's plan doesn't add up. The paper also pointed to Romney's now-infamous "47%" comments caught on a secretly-recorded video at a private fund-raiser in Florida suggesting that nearly half of Americans will vote for Obama because they are reliant on government services. http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.co...e-throws-support-behind-obama/comment-page-1/
You look like big idiot pretending obama can't lose, somehow i think you are engaging in a bit of childish magical thinking. If you hypnotize yourself into believing it , it somehow will become true.
Someone picks up what I have been saying for days... http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/330966/obama-s-independent-problem-josh-jordan Obamaâs Independent Problem By Josh Jordan October 19, 2012 10:00 A.M. Comments27 For all of the talk this year about party-ID breakdowns in polling (of which I am guilty myself), there is an underlying statistic that should have Team Obama extremely worried about their prospects: Mitt Romney leads with independents in every single national poll. This is no small feat â in 2008 President Obama took independents by 8 percent. Today Romneyâs lead with independents is, on average, 8.3 percent. Thatâs based on ten current national polls that provide independent head-to-head numbers (Gallup and UPI are the only two that do not): The 8.3 percentage lead with independents helps to overcome the 4.5 percent sample advantage Democrats have in those same polls, which is the reason Romney is able to scratch out a razor thin .2 percent lead: To give a bigger sense of why this is such an important number for Romney, consider this: In 2008 Obama won the national popular vote by 7.2 percent overall. If you assume equal turnout in 2012 as 2008 (39 percent Democrats, 32 percent Republicans, and 29 percent independents) but take Obamaâs 8 percent win with independents and give it Romney, that 7.2 percent 2008 margin drops to 2.6 percent. If Romney can get Obamaâs lead down to 2.6 percent before they even chip away at the giant turnout advantage Democrats had in 2008 (or win over some Democrats to Romney), it is going to be almost impossible for Obama to win. ...