For the first time since April, President Obama has opened up a sustained lead over Republican Mitt Romney in Gallupâs daily tracking poll of the presidential race.
Obama leads Romney 48%-44% in the poll, marking the sixth consecutive day in which the poll has showed him with a small, but statistically meaningful lead. The shift comes after almost two months in which the two candidates were essentially tied in the pollâs results.
The uptick for Obama started before the Supreme Courtâs ruling upholding most parts of Obamaâs healthcare ruling. The ruling, itself, does not appear to have had an impact on the shape of the race. Democratic strategists believe that the Obama campaignâs repeated attacks on Romneyâs business record, particularly the involvement of his company, Bain Capital, in âoffshoringâ of jobs, has begun to conne ct with voters.
The results are particularly notable because many polling analysts believe that Gallupâs methods for analyzing its nightly surveys slightly under-represents the number of minority voters and, therefore, understates Obamaâs support by a couple of points.
Several recent state-by-state polls also have showed results consistent with a small increase in Obamaâs support.
Whether the uptick can be sustained remains to be seen. Recent economic indicators have continued to reflect trouble in the economy, and Obama remains weak among white voters, so he will continue to remain vulnerable. One hopeful historical parallel for the Democrats â" in 2004, then-President George W. Bush took a small lead over Democratic Sen. John Kerry at just about this point in the summer. Bush, of course, went on to win reelection. Obamaâs level of job approval in Gallupâs surveys stands at exactly the level that Bush garnered at this point in 2004.
david.lauter@latimes.com
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