Poll: Romney, Obama Tied in Ohio - Daniel Dohertyhttp://townhall.com/tipsheet/danieldoherty/2012/10/20/poll_romney_obama_tied_in_ohio … via @townhallcom
Poll: Romney, Obama Tied in Ohio
The latest Gravis Marketing poll conducted in Ohio shows Governor Romney and President Obama locked in a virtual dead heat, 47% to 47%. Here are a few key findings from the survey:
Romney leads by 6 percentage points among men (50 to 44 percent), while Obama leads by 4 percentage points among women (49 to 45 percent).Both sides are doing well to consolidate their bases in Ohio. 87 percent of Democrats say they will vote for President Obama and 92 percent of Republicans say they will vote for Governor Romney if the election were held today. Governor Romney leads with independents 52 to 33 percent.The president has a net negative job approval rating of 6 points, 44 percent approve of President Obama’s job performance while 50 percent do not.Ohio voters are more likely by a 6 percentage point margin to think the country is going in the wrong direction (49 percent) than in the right direction (43 percent).
Considering no Republican candidate has ever won the presidency without first winning Ohio, the internals from this survey are rather encouraging. In fact, the ridiculous D/R/I sample breakdown -- which is 41/32/27(!) -- suggests that despite the obvious skew the Buckeye State is unquestionably up for grabs. Good to know. But to appreciate this new development, however, perhaps it’s worth recalling how the chattering class -- up until very recently -- seemed utterly convinced that Republicans would never be able to recapture this crucially important swing state. National Review’s Josh Jordan explains:
Just a few weeks ago, Ohio was a state that was considered almost every media outlet to be a solid lock for Obama. There’s no need to rehash the actual headlines, but some even suggested Romney give up on Ohio and look elsewhere for a path to victory. Before the first debate, Romney was down 5.6 in RCP’s Buckeye State average. Today he is down 2.5, cutting his deficit by more than half, presumably in large part due to his strong first-debate performance.
Gravis Marketing conducted an automated survey of 1943 likely voters in the state of Ohio. October 18, 2012 and October 19, 2012. The margin of error for the survey is +/-2.2% and higher for subgroups.
Results shown by gender and party represent those respondents within those subgroups. All numbers shown in the tables represent percentages rounded to the nearest whole percentage.
The questions were asked in the order of the question numbers which appear in this report. Results only include respondents who answered they were registered voters, likely, or very likely to vote. The statistical methodology comprised weighing various groups for anticipated voting proportions, by using census data and voter turnout models from previous elections.
The poll was conducted on behalf of Gravis Marketing, Inc., Gravis Marketing is a non-partisan marketing and research firm, located in Winter Springs Florida. Contact Doug Kaplan 407-242-1870 doug@gravismarketing.com,
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Ballot, Job Performance & Direction of the Country
|
Question 8: If the election for President of the United States were held today who would you vote for?
|
Ohio
Voters
|
Gender
|
Party
| |||
Men
|
Women
|
Democrat
|
Republican
|
Independent
| ||
Barack Obama
|
47
|
44
|
49
|
87
|
7
|
33
|
Mitt Romney
|
47
|
50
|
45
|
9
|
92
|
52
|
Undecided
|
6
|
5
|
6
|
4
|
1
|
15
|
Question 9: Do you approve of President Obama’s job performance?
|
Ohio
Voters
|
Gender
|
Party
| |||
Men
|
Women
|
Democrat
|
Republican
|
Independent
| ||
Yes
|
44
|
41
|
47
|
82
|
7
|
31
|
No
|
50
|
53
|
46
|
13
|
90
|
58
|
Undecided
|
6
|
5
|
7
|
5
|
4
|
11
|
Question 10: Do you think the United States of America is headed in the right direction or wrong direction?
|
Ohio
Voters
|
Gender
|
Party
| |||
Men
|
Women
|
Democrat
|
Republican
|
Independent
| ||
Right Direction
|
43
|
39
|
46
|
80
|
6
|
30
|
Wrong Direction
|
49
|
53
|
46
|
12
|
89
|
58
|
Undecided
|
8
|
8
|
8
|
8
|
5
|
12
|
Screeners & Demographics
|
Question 1: Are you registered to vote?
|
Ohio Voters
|
Yes
|
100
|
No
|
0
|
Question 2: How likely are you to vote in this year’s presidential elections?
|
Ohio Voters
|
Very unlikely
|
0
|
Unlikely
|
0
|
Somewhat unlikely
|
0
|
Somewhat likely
|
0
|
Likely
|
5
|
Very likely
|
95
|
Question 3: What is your political party affiliation? [FIRST TWO CHOICES ROTATED]
|
Ohio Voters
|
Democrat
|
41
|
Republican
|
32
|
Independent or in another party
|
27
|
Question 4: What race do you identify yourself as?
|
Ohio Voters
|
White/Caucasian
|
76
|
African-American
|
12
|
Hispanic
|
6
|
Asian
|
1
|
Other
|
5
|
Question 5: Which of the following best represents your religious affiliation?
|
Ohio Voters
|
Catholic
|
23
|
Protestant/Other Christian
|
50
|
Jewish
|
2
|
Muslim
|
1
|
Other
|
24
|
Question 6: What is your age?
|
Ohio Voters
|
18-29
|
18
|
30-49
|
28
|
50-64
|
30
|
65+
|
24
|
Question 7: What is your gender?
|
Ohio Voters
|
Male
|
47
|
Female
|
53
|
Contact Doug Kaplan:doug@gravismarketing.com
www.gravismarketing.com
www.gravismarketing.com
