New Polls Show Michigan, Pennsylvania as Swing  States



By _Napp  Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/) , 
Christian Post Reporter
October 9, 2012|8:26 am
In some of the first state level polls conducted since  last Wednesday's 
presidential debate, Michigan and Pennsylvania have moved from  lean-Obama 
states to swing states. The Romney campaign had previously pulled  their 
advertising from those states to concentrate on other states.
A _Susquehanna Polling and Research poll_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/docs/2012/Susquehanna_PA_1008.pdf)  of 725 
likely  Pennsylvania voters 
conducted Oct. 4-6 shows Obama's lead down to only two  percentage points (47 
to 
45 percent), which is within the plus or minus 3.7  percentage point margin 
of error. Four percent of those polled said they were  undecided. When they 
were asked who they were leaning toward, they favored  Romney three to one. 
Factoring this in, Obama's lead is only one percentage  point. 
In Michigan, two new polls also show a tight race. A poll of 1,122  
respondents conducted Oct. 5 by _Foster McCollum White & Associates _ 
(http://www.scribd.com/doc/109397194/FMWB-Fox-2-News-Aggregate-Polling-Study-Report-for-Mi
chigan-General-Election-10-05-2012) showed a 3 percentage  point advantage 
for Obama (49 to 46 percent with a 2.93 percent margin of error.  The poll 
did not screen for registered or likely voters.) An Oct. 5-7 poll of  600 
likely Michigan voters _conducted by EPIC-MRA_ 
(http://www.freep.com/article/20121008/NEWS15/121008081/Romney-s-strong-debate-helps-him-close-gap-Obama-Mich
igan-poll-shows)  had similar results. Obama leads by only  three 
percentage points (48 to 45 percent), with a plus or minus four percentage  
point 
margin of error. 
While Obama still shows a lead in those states and shows an advantage in 
the  electoral college vote, the results could be important if subsequent 
polls show  similar results. It would mean that the Obama campaign might have 
to 
spend  resources which would otherwise be spent elsewhere to hold on to 
those states.  Also, it would provide Romney a greater range of possibilities 
to achieve the  270 electoral college votes needed to clinch the presidency. 
Early in the race the Romney campaign appeared to want to compete for  
Michigan and Pennsylvania. Romney campaigned and ran television ads in both  
states. Romney was raised in Michigan and his father, George Romney, served as  
governor there. After continued poor showings in the polls, though, his 
campaign  appeared to give up on those states. The newest polls, therefore, 
could shift  the Romney campaign strategy. 
The polls came after what was widely viewed as a poor debate performance 
for  Obama and strong debate performance for Romney. In a recent Gallup poll, 
72  percent thought Romney did better in the debate. Even a plurality of 
Democrats  in the poll thought Romney did better than Obama (49 to 39 percent). 
Prior to  the debate, polls showed Obama leading Romney by as much as 12 
percentage points  in both Michigan and Pennsylvania.

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