Fox News poll: Romney erases Obama's lead nationally after first debate - Fox News [dayinformations.blogspot.com]
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Mitt Romney now holds a narrow advantage over Barack Obama in the race for the White House -- 46 percent to 45 percent, if the election were held today, according to a Fox News national poll of likely voters released Wednesday. Â
Thatâs a six-point turnaround and a three-point âdebate bounceâ for Romney.
Before the first presidential debate in Denver last Wednesday, Romney had 43 percent to Obamaâs 48 percent (September 24-26, 2012). Â
Romneyâs edge comes mainly from independents, white voters and men. Â Just over half of men (51 percent) back Romney now, the highest level of support heâs received among this group. Â
The poll shows independents side with Romney by 44-32 percent. Â Thatâs a reversal from before the debate when it was 43-39 in Obamaâs favor. Â One independent in four is undecided or will vote for another candidate.
Support for Obama is down a bit across the board -- most notably among young voters: Â 50 percent of voters under age 30 back Obama, down from 58 percent two weeks ago. Â
According to the Fox News exit poll, 66 percent of young voters and 52 percent of independents backed Obama in the 2008 election. Â
Republicans (92 percent) are more likely than Democrats (83 percent) to be extremely or very interested in the election. Â Enthusiasm is higher on the Republican side as well: Â Those backing Romney (64 percent) are seven points more likely than those siding with Obama (57 percent) to say it is âextremelyâ important their candidate win. Â
Likewise, more Romney supporters (86 percent) than Obama supporters (81 percent) say they will âdefinitelyâ vote for their candidate. Â
Meanwhile, more people like Romney after the debate. Â Fifty-two percent have a favorable opinion of him, up from 48 percent two weeks ago. Â This is not only his highest favorable rating among likely voters, but also the first time itâs been over 50 percent. Â Plus, itâs the first time he has had a higher favorable rating than Obama -- albeit by just one percentage point. Â Fifty-one percent of voters view Obama favorably, unchanged from before the debate (September 24-26).
Also for the first time, by an 8-point margin, more likely voters trust Romney than Obama to improve the economy and create jobs (51-43 percent). Â Two weeks ago, Obama had a one-point edge on dealing with the economy. Â
Romneyâs chipping away on other issues as well. Â Obama had an 11-point edge over Romney on handling foreign policy two weeks ago. Â Thatâs down to a 6-point advantage now. Â Similarly on health care, Obamaâs previous 9-point lead is down to 2 points. Â
More voters trust Romney to reduce the deficit (+13 points), manage their tax dollars (+7 points) and handle illegal immigration (+3 points). Â More trust Obama to protect Medicare (+8 points), handle foreign policy (+6 points) and deal with terrorism (+4 points). Â
In addition, Romney is more trusted by voters to handle their personal finances, and fewer think heâll raise their taxes. Â By a four-point margin (50-46 percent), more say they would trust Romney to manage their familyâs money and bank accounts. Â By 21-point margin voters say they wouldnât trust Obama (38-59 percent). Â
Half of voters (50 percent) think their taxes will go up if Obama is re-elected, while 41 percent think Romney will raise their taxes.
Meanwhile, by a narrow 3-point margin more voters want Romney than Obama to nominate the next Supreme Court justice (47-44 percent).
Last week had good news for both campaigns. Â For Romney, the good news was the debate. Â Most voters who saw some of last weekâs debate think Romney won (76-14 percent). Â For Obama, it was economic news. Â On Friday, a favorable jobs report showed the national unemployment rate under eight percent for the first time since Obama took office. Â
So far, the debate appears to have trumped the jobs report. Â Nearly half of voters -- 46 percent -- say theyâve heard or read something in the past week that makes them feel âmore positiveâ about Romney, while 34 percent say âless positive.â Â The results are the opposite for Obama: Â 30 percent say they heard something that made them feel âmore positiveâ and 46 percent âless positive.â
Voters are split over whether the job situation is getting better or worse (45-46 percent).
Still, more voters say the economy overall is getting better than getting worse by 49-42 percent.
Sentiment is divided when the question is taken from the national level to the individual: Â 43 percent say it feels like things are getting better for their family, while slightly more -- 45 percent -- says things are getting worse for them. Â Some 12 percent say things are staying the same. Â
One percent of likely voters rates economic conditions as âexcellent,â while 15 percent say âgood.â Â Most voters rate the economy negatively: Â 42 percent say âonly fairâ and another 41 percent say itâs in âpoorâ shape. Â Two years ago, 58 percent said âpoorâ (October 2010).
Just under half of voters say Obamaâs economic policies arenât working so itâs time to vote him out (48 percent). Â The remaining half says the presidentâs policies are working and he should be re-elected (32 percent) or they are hesitant to change presidents now even though Obamaâs policies arenât working (17 percent). Â
Some 28 percent of Democrats say Obamaâs economic policies havenât done enough, even if they think itâs too risky to change leadership right now.
Over half of voters -- 52 percent -- donât trust the federal government, while 43 percent generally do. Â Voters who trust the government mostly back Obama, while those who donât mainly side with Romney.
By a two-to-one margin voters think Americans rely too much on the government (65-30 percent). Â
And by a wide 31 percentage-point margin voters think Obama relies more than Romney on a teleprompter. Â
The Fox News poll is based on live telephone interviews on landlines and cell phones from October 7 to October 9 among 1,109 randomly-chosen likely voters nationwide. Â Likely voters are registered voters who are considered most likely to vote in the November presidential election. Â The poll is conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R). Â For the total sample, it has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points. Â The poll is weighted by age and race; it is not weighted by party identification.
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