Y'know guys, this should probably be split out into a new thread. Especially seeing as how healthcare isn't even a top-3 issue in the race at this moment. And you're both starting to make this a personal thing.
Let's get back to the horserace. And what better way to do that than by bringing in my favorite things in the whole wide wacky world of politics:
POLLS! (and snark)
From RealClearPolitics:
Obama's approval rating is hovering right around 48-49%, with his disapproval rating between 48-50%. We can presume the remaining 1-2% answered "pie".
Congress's approval rating is roughly the same as
Encino Man's rating on Rotten Tomatoes: 16%. Hell, Brendan Fraser and Pauly Shore might make better Representatives than most of the folks in there now. Well...Fraser might.
For the main event, here's the latest polling data:
RCP Average 8/3 - 8/15 -- Obama +3.5 Rasmussen Tracking 8/13 - Romney +1 Gallup Tracking 8/9 - 8/15 Romney +2 CNN/Opinion Research 8/7 - 8/8 Obama +7 Politico/GWU/Battleground 8/5 - 8/9 Obama +1 IBD/CSM/TIPP 8/3 - 8/10 Obama +7 FOX News 8/5 - 8/7 Obama +9 |
Worth noting: FOX News actually has the highest margin for Obama, which is surprising. The aggregate should probably be closer to +4, since as I've noted many times -- if there was a race between Bill Clinton in the prime of his popularity, and Richard Nixon's decomposing corpse, Rasmussen would show it as a tie.
RCP also has an interesting little ongoing feature where they show the current margin in the polls vs. the margin at this same point in the race vs. 2008 and 2004.
Today's spread for Obama: 3.0 points
Obama's spread vs McCain (8/16/08): 3.2 points
Bush's spread vs Kerry (8/16/04): -1.4 points
That last one is a good reminder that being up at this point in the race is no guarantee. But when you look at the overall movement in the polls, it's essentially flat. Romney started out at about a 6-point disadvantage in March. He closed it to within just over 1 percentage point in late July, but now has slid back to 3 points. The gap opened up pretty evenly on that one, Romney lost a full point, Obama gained a full point.
But hold on, you say! National aggregates aren't as important as electoral vote tallies! What about state-level polls?
Well, currently Obama has a "safe" 231 electoral votes to Romney's 191. That leaves 110 toss-ups. Obama only needs 39 of those 110 to win (and conversely, Romney would need to take 79 of 110, a much tougher task at this point)
How those 110 break down:
Florida -- 29
Ohio -- 18
North Carolina -- 15
Virginia -- 13
Wisconsin -- 10
Colorado -- 9
Iowa -- 6
Nevada -- 6
New Hampshire -- 4
Care to take a guess what states both sets of candidates have been racking up their frequent-flyer miles on?
As long as no other states "come into play", Obama can win with just Florida and Wisconsin. Florida is obviously the big prize here, but they're not going to put all their eggs in one basket, especially in a state known for election-day WTF'ery as Florida is.
So how do the top battleground states look at this point? Here's the RCP aggregates for the top five as of today:
Florida:
Obama +1Ohio:
Obama +3North Carolina:
Romney +1Virginia:
Obama +0.7Wisconsin:
Obama +4.3 (honestly, if his gains in WI keep steady, it'll moved into the "marginally safe" category soon)
Colorado:
Obama +1All in all, things look pretty good for Team Obama at this point. If they can keep Joe Biden from shooting himself in the face with his mouth, they can probably hold ground and pull this thing out. There's still almost three months left, though. A LOT can happen in that time.