Mullings

An American Cyber-Column

The Second Debate Thud

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

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·  Here’s what we know so far:

·  The first debate between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney changed the direction of the campaign. In the two-plus weeks since that debate Obama’s lead in national polls and nearly every battleground state poll has shrunk or Romney has pulled ahead.

·  The second debate, which most observers believe Obama won on style points, has had no effect on the race whatsoever.

·  At least so far.

·  In the three tracking polls: Rasmussen, Gallup and Investor’s Business Daily that had at least one night of their tracking in the field following the second debate Romney has advanced.

·  In all three tracking polls, Romney gained one percentage point and is now +2 over Obama in the Rasmussen track; +7 in the Gallup track, and even in the IDB track. Romney was -1 on the day of the debate.

·  I am not changing my opinion that Obama won that debate. That’s not the issue. The issue is: Did his winning have any effect on likely voters?

·  So far, as I said, the answer is no.

·  We’ll have more data later today and we might see a swing back toward Obama, but even if we do, October has been the cruelest month for the Obama campaign.

·  On September 30 – following a full five weeks of Romney being off-message because of a hurricane that missed Tampa, an empty chair, the Democrats’ convention, and an ill-advised press release following the attack in Benghazi - Obama was leading in the Real Clear Politics summary of polls by an average of 4.0 percentage points.

·  As of last night, as I was typing this, following two debates, an unemployment report that showed progress and new (but damaging) information about Libya, Romney is now at +1 in the RCP average.

·  That, even for people like me who are mathematically challenged, is a swing of five percentage points.

·  H.U.G.E.

·  I am torn because I have a hard time believing the Gallup numbers from yesterday: Romney +7 (52-45) but I didn’t have any trouble believing the Gallup tracking poll on October 1 when it had Obama +6 (50-44).

·  It appears that the second debate may not have had the effect on the race that the Obama’s supporters hoped for.

·  Maybe it is because, as The Lad wrote in his analysis of the debate on Jedburghs.com:

“Barack Obama won tonight’s debate on points, not because he beat Mitt Romney, but because he beat the Barack Obama of two weeks ago.”

·  These kids today, huh?

·  The problem for the Obamas is that we are down to 18 days to go and the tide is running strongly in Romney’s favor.

·  Will it turn before November 6? Don’t know. But I <i>do</i> know that any candidate would rather be running with the tide than swimming against it, no matter where you are in the campaign cycle.

·  As we have been saying for 18 months, the Obama campaign simply cannot survive this election if it is a referendum on the last four years.

·  The Obama campaign has to make this a comparison between the individuals – Barack Obama and Mitt Romney – and it has spent somewhere near a half BILLION dollars demonizing Romney.

·  That first debate changed the course of the campaign because some 68 million viewers got to see for themselves what the two men looked like side-by-side.

·  The 65 million who saw the second debate watched a Barack Obama being the Barack Obama they had expected to see two weeks earlier. He met their expectations.

·  When you are trying to be rehired for a job that affects the lives of every person on the planet Earth, “Met Expectations” is not a good enough grade.

·  Please <a href = “http://www.mullings.com/09-30-12.htm”> <b>Subscribe</b</a> today.

·  On the <a href = “http://www.mullings.com/dr_10-19-12.htm”<b>Secret Decoder Ring</b</a> page today: Links to the Gallup tracking poll page and to The Lad’s analysis of the debate. Also a Mullfoto from the George Washington Parkway yesterday.

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