Obama led Romney by the skin of his teeth, taking 46 percent against the Republican who was right behind him with 45 percent. Obama led Paul by the same margin, beating the Texas congressman 45 percent to 44 percent. The president did better against three other Republican hopefuls.
A
poll from Public Policy Polling (PPP), a firm with connections to
prominent Democrats, found that President Barack Obama would have a
fight to keep Florida in his column during the
2012
election as two Republican candidates -- former Gov. Mitt Romney
of Massachusetts and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas -- were right on his
heels in the Sunshine State.
Obama
led Romney by the skin of his teeth, taking 46 percent against the
Republican who was right behind him with 45 percent. Obama led Paul
by the same margin, beating the Texas congressman 45 percent to 44
percent. The president did better against three other Republican
hopefuls. Obama took 49 percent against U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann of
Minnesota who trailed with 44 percent. The president garnered 50
percent against Texas Gov. Rick Perry who followed with 43 percent.
Obama did best when matched against former U.S. House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, beating the former congressional leader 50 percent to 42
percent.
In
a statement on Thursday, Dean Debnam, president of PPP, contrasted
how the two leading GOP hopefuls in the race -- Romney and Perry --
did against Obama in Florida during the pre-
2012
election poll.
“Florida
makes it pretty clear that out of the two Republican front-runners
there’s one who can beat Barack Obama and one who can’t,” said
Debnam. “There’s no way the GOP wins next year without Florida,
and it doesn’t look like Rick Perry can do that.”
A
total of 476 Florida voters were surveyed for this poll regarding
the
2012
election. The
2012
election poll was taken from Sept. 22-25 and had a margin of
error of 4.5 percent.
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| About the author |
The original blog post was published in Sunshine State News on September 29, 2011 by Kevin Apter. Sunshine State News focuses on the relationship between politics and business in Florida, speaking to an audience of lawmakers, lobbyists, business and opinion leaders, and all Floridians who expect their leaders to make common-sense decisions. SSN fills a void as the only Florida news outfit that believes free-market, less-government solutions will address the problems challenging our state. |
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