Obama and Romney Hit Final Stretch Part 3

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Romney campaign and the pro Romney super pac are putting millions of dollars in to PA, there must be a reason for that. Polls have shown Romney gaining and with in reach
There is a great reason…just like McCain they are afraid that they are losing Ohio. I live in the Alabama section of PA and I can tell you, based on editorials and responses and comments in local newspapers, and conversations with my Republican friends, that there is little enthusiasm for Mitt Romney.

If he can’t win big here…he can’t win Pennsylvania.

John
 
Romney campaign and the pro Romney super pac are putting millions of dollars in to PA, there must be a reason for that. Polls have shown Romney gaining and with in reach
Couldn’t one of the reasons be that the Romney campaign is afraid they will lose Ohio and has decided on an alternative strategy involving swing states and purple states in which PA is one of the targets? Just a thought.
 
There is a great reason…just like McCain they are afraid that they are losing Ohio. I live in the Alabama section of PA and I can tell you, based on editorials and responses and comments in local newspapers, and conversations with my Republican friends, that there is little enthusiasm for Mitt Romney.

If he can’t win big here…he can’t win Pennsylvania.

John
Franklin & Marshall poll for PA said Romney had a 16 point lead with independents and cbs said ‘Mitt Romney is now within striking distance.’ Poll had democrat plus 13 sample. Susquehanna had Romney up 4 in PA and the pollster said 2 days ago that it was too close to call

Abc moved PA from safe for Obama to lean. Romney has been gaining in PA. From what I have noticed Romney campaign started putting more resources into PA when the polls showed Romney gaining there

If Romney had little enthusiam he would not have gained in 1 month 7 points in PA
 
Restore our future, pro Romney super pac and the Romney campaign are putting millions of dollars in to PA, there must be a reason for that. Polls have shown Romney gaining and with in reach. If PA is safe for Obama why have Biden and Bill Clinton been to PA in the last few days?
I don’t think PA is safe for Obama, not in the sense that New York is safe for Obama or that Texas is safe for Romney. PA is considered a purple state, if not a swing state. Romney’s pouring millions of dollars into PA almost forces Obama and his surrogates to campaign in PA.

I have a funny feeling that the small state of NH may play a pivotal role in the election.
 
Franklin & Marshall poll for PA said Romney had a 16 point lead with independents and cbs said ‘Mitt Romney is now within striking distance.’ Poll had democrat plus 13 sample. Susquehanna had Romney up 4 in PA and the pollster said 2 days ago that it was too close to call

Abc moved PA from safe for Obama to lean. Romney has been gaining in PA. From what I have noticed Romney campaign started putting mroe resources into PA when the polls when Romney started gaining there
Believe what you will…Romney’s chances are very outside by my reckoning here on the ground.

John
 
Believe what you will…Romney’s chances are very outside by my reckoning here on the ground.

John
You can only know so many people, you can not know everyone in the state and how they will vote
 
HOUSTON, TX - Friday afternoon at an early polling place located at 6719 W. Montgomery Road in Houston, NAACP members were seen advocating for President Barack Obama according to volunteer poll watchers on location at the time.

According to Eve Rockford, a poll watcher trained by voter integrity group True the Vote, three NAACP members showed up to the 139 precinct location with 50 cases of bottled water and began handing bottles out to people standing in line. While wearing NAACP labeled clothing, members were “stirring the crowd” and talking to voters about flying to Ohio to promote President Barack Obama.

After watching what was occurring, Rockford approached Polling Supervisor Rose Cochran about what she was seeing.

“I went to the polling supervisor and let her know that it was not appropriate that they were in the building handing out water. She ignored me. I repeated my statement. She told me that she would handle it. She did nothing. I then went to the assistant supervisor and he stood up, walked over to another table and then sat down. I then walked into the waiting room and they were reloading another dolly with more cases of water,” Rockford said in a True the Vote incident report.

After handing out water and advocating for President Obama, the NAACP members started handpicking and moving people to the front of a long voting line inside the polling place according to the incident report. After multiple complaints from voters about the line cutting, Rockford received a phone call from downtown telling her to “stand down.”

“All of the sudden one of the clerks, Dayan Cohen, said that someone wanted to speak to me on the phone. It was someone from downtown. I got on the phone and she said she was from downtown and that I needed to stand down and that it was okay for the NAACP to be within 100 ft. and they could hand out water. I told her that the NAACP was inside the building, wearing the NAACP clothing and caps and were handing out water and moving people from the back of the lines to the front of the lines,” Rockford said.

At this point, NAACP members were instructed to turn their clothing inside out, which they refused to do and said they weren’t going to stop their actions inside the polling place. Their behavior and actions to move people to the front of the line continued for the rest of the evening. Texas State Representative Sylvester Turner, a former Texas NAACP leader, was also seen outside the building talking with voters.

“The NAACP basically ran this poll location and the judges did nothing about it,” Rockford said.

Katie Pavlich, Townhall.com
 
Learn something new everyday. 😃
I’m sure the people of the State of Alabama just love the implied derogatory reference that Carville, a Louisianan, made in reference to the ‘Alabama’ section of Pennsylvania.
 
According to Costas Panagopoulos 17 polling organisations overestimated Obama in 2008. It was not so bad in 2008 because thay was not a close election, some people say this will be so if these pollsters are overestimating Obama by even a few points that could change the race. Polling orgs with starts next to them overestimated John McCain

fordham.edu/images/academics/graduate_schools/gsas/elections_and_campaign_/poll%20accuracy%20in%20the%202008%20presidential%20election.pdf
  1. Rasmussen (11/1-3)**
  2. Pew (10/29-11/1)**
  3. YouGov/Polimetrix (10/18-11/1)
  4. Harris Interactive (10/20-27)
  5. GWU (Lake/Tarrance) (11/2-3)*
  6. Diageo/Hotline (10/31-11/2)*
  7. ARG (10/25-27)*
  8. CNN (10/30-11/1)
  9. Ipsos/McClatchy (10/30-11/1)
  10. DailyKos.com (D)/Research 2000 (11/1-3)
  11. AP/Yahoo/KN (10/17-27)
  12. Democracy Corps (D) (10/30-11/2)
  13. FOX (11/1-2)
  14. Economist/YouGov (10/25-27)
  15. IBD/TIPP (11/1-3)
  16. NBC/WSJ (11/1-2)
  17. ABC/Post (10/30-11/2)
  18. Marist College (11/3)
  19. CBS (10/31-11/2)
  20. Gallup (10/31-11/2)
  21. Reuters/ C-SPAN/ Zogby (10/31-11/3)
  22. CBS/Times (10/25-29)
  23. Newsweek (10/22-23)
 
I’m sure the people of the State of Alabama just love the implied derogatory reference that Carville, a Louisianan, made in reference to the ‘Alabama’ section of Pennsylvania.
How do you think we feel? Ole Jim…a real piece of work, as we would say here In Palabama.

John
 
*Most American pastors not backing presidential candidates, survey shows
CWN - November 02, 2012

Most regular churchgoers in the US have not heard explicit political advice from their pastors, a new survey from the Pew Research Center shows.

A bare majority of regular churchgoers (52%) reported that they had been encouraged to vote in the November elections. But only 19% said that their pastors had indicated a preference for a particular presidential candidate.

The glaring exception to that rule, the Pew survey shows, comes among Black Protestant churches. In those churches, survey respondents said, 79% of the pastors had emphasized the importance of voting, and 40% had backed a particular candidate. Among those who had backed a presidential candidate, all of the Pew respondents said that the pastor had given the nod to President Obama.

In white Evangelical churches, 54% of pastors had urged their people to vote; of those who backed a candidate, 5% of the pastors chose Obama and 26% opted for Mitt Romney. In Catholic churches the figures were similar, with 46% of priests encouraging their parishioners to vote, 4% backing Obama, and 21% recommending a vote for Romney. *

News for thought…
 
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