Rasmussen…
What
They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key
Polls
Saturday, September 01, 2012
Just
as Labor Day marks the end of summer for
most Americans, it also signals the beginning of the presidential
campaign
season for many. Now they’ll focus on the race with Election Day
looming just
two months away.
So
where do President Obama and Mitt Romney
stand at this point? Heading into the Republican National Convention,
the
candidates have been even for months in the daily Presidential Tracking
Poll.
At week’s end, Romney was starting to enjoy a modest bounce from his
convention. President Obama expects to do the same next week.
Our
new Swing State daily tracking also finds
the candidates running close in 11 states key to the election. All of
the 11
Swing States were won by President Obama in 2008. The Rasmussen Reports
Electoral College projections show the president with a 247 to 196
Electoral
Vote lead, but seven critical states with 95 votes remain Toss-Ups. The
Electoral College picture will likely shift a bit following the
conventions,
but it’s impossible to know what the shifts might be.
Still,
voters by 20 points – 53% to 33% -
predict that the president will be reelected. Republicans are expected
to keep
control of the House of Representatives, but voters are evenly divided
over the
future of the Senate.
Look
for Scott Rasmussen and his guests to help
sort this out when “What America Thinks” debuts this coming weekend on
more
than 50 television stations from coast to coast. Check the list of
stations
here.
Most
voters are excited now about the chance to
vote for either Romney or Obama, thanks to a big jump in enthusiasm
among
Republicans since the naming of Paul Ryan to their national ticket. So
clearly
GOP voters don’t think it’s over yet.
The
wild card in the deck remains the economy,
still the number one issue on voters’ minds as it has been for Obama’s
entire
presidency, and a plurality (44%) continues to rate the president's
economic
performance as poor. Thirty-five percent (35%) give him good or
excellent marks
in this area.
Voters
still trust Romney more than Obama when
it comes to handling the economy - but just barely - by a 48% to 44%
margin.
They have more confidence in the president when it comes to national
security,
and as for taxes, health care and energy policy, the presidential
hopefuls are
virtually tied, indicative of how close the race remains.
The
bad news for Romney is that he had a
12-point lead on the economy in May, but that advantage has been
declining ever
since.
The
bad news for the president is that the
economic news remains grim. Only 16% of Americans believe that today’s
children
will be better off than their parents. Just 28% of voters think the
country is
heading in the right direction.
The
Rasmussen Consumer and Investor Indexes,
which measure daily confidence among both groups, continue to stumble
along.
Fifty-eight percent (58%) of consumers say the United States is in a
recession,
a view shared by 59% of investors.
Most
Americans still believe it will take more
than three years for the housing market to recover from the 2008
economic
meltdown, and a sizable number continues to predict full recovery of
the stock
market will take at least that long, too.
Just
over half (51%) believe a home is a
family’s best investment, but most still don’t think it’s a good time
for
someone to sell their house. By comparison, 73% thought a home was a
family's
best investment in September 2008 just before the Wall Street meltdown.
Gas
prices are going up again as summer ends,
with 68% of American Adults now saying they are paying more for a
gallon of gas
than they were six months ago. Seventy-eight percent (78%) think it's
likely
that the price of gas will rise above $4 a gallon in the next few
months,
including 56% who say it's Very Likely.
Most
voters still support repeal of the
president’s national health care law and believe it will increase the
deficit
and the cost of health care.
More
voters than ever consider Romney a
conservative, but the president is still viewed as further to the
political
left than Romney is to the right. To put this in perspective, voters
are more
than twice as likely to describe themselves as fiscal conservatives as
opposed
to being fiscal liberals, but they break even when it comes to social
issues.
But
while many talk about the ideological gap
or the gender gap between the candidates, Scott Rasmussen explains in a
new
radio update that there’s a growing generation gap in the mix. Yes,
Obama still
has a sizable lead among voters under 40 just as he did in 2008, but
now
seniors are moving to the Republican in numbers that far exceed their
support
for John McCain. (Listen to Scott’s radio updates three times daily
Monday
through Friday on a radio station in your area, courtesy of the WOR
Radio
Network.)
So
what about the national political
conventions on television and in the headlines this past week and next?
Most
voters aren’t watching much of them, regardless of their party
affiliation, and
over one-third of independent voters plan to tune them out completely.
The
conventions are long past determining the
presidential candidates of the major parties, and a lot of voters don’t
have
much use for them anymore. Forty-four percent (44%), in fact, consider
the
conventions a waste of time and money, but 35% disagree. Twenty-two
percent
(22%) are undecided.
Scott
Rasmussen argues in his latest newspaper
column that the conventions are “stark reminder of how out of touch our
political system has become. … They only serve to remind us that what
interests
-- and entertains -- the political class has little to do with what
America
needs.”
One
of the highlights of each party’s
convention is the prime-time speech given by the presidential
candidate’s wife.
Voters remain evenly divided on the importance of the wives in
determining how
they will vote for president in November, but favorables for Michelle
Obama and
Ann Romney are up as the campaign begins in earnest.
Control
of the Senate’s in play, too, this
fall, with 33 seats up for grabs, only 10 of which are held by the GOP.
The
Rasmussen Reports Senate Balance of Power rankings show Democrats in
good shape
to hold 47 seats while Republicans can also count on 47. Six remain
Toss-Ups
and will determine which party controls the Senate.
But
for the first time since November,
Republicans and Democrats run even on the Generic Congressional Ballot.
Republicans have held a modest lead on the ballot nearly every week
since June
2009.
The
number of voters nationwide who believe
Congress is doing a good job remains in single digits.
Voters
remain almost evenly divided over
whether they would support a candidate who opposes all tax increases or
one who
would raise taxes only on wealthy Americans.
Read
the rest of the report, plus get the links
to all data at Rasmussen
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