New NBC News/WSJ/Marist Polls show President Obama leads Mitt Romney in the key battleground states of Iowa, Wisconsin, and Colorado.
Iowa: Obama 50%, Romney 42%
Wisconsin: Obama 50%, Romney 45%
Colorado: Obama 50%, Romney 45%
New NBC News/WSJ/Marist Polls show President Obama leads Mitt Romney in the key battleground states of Iowa, Wisconsin, and Colorado.
Iowa: Obama 50%, Romney 42%
Wisconsin: Obama 50%, Romney 45%
Colorado: Obama 50%, Romney 45%
President Obama’s campaign released a new video made up entirely out-of-context clips of Mitt Romney, intended to show how the Romney campaign’s attack on Obama’s 14 year old “redistribution” comment was unfair.
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“The president threw in the white flag of surrender. He said he
can’t change Washington from the inside. We’re going to give him that
chance in November, he’s going outside.”
— Mitt Romney, quoted by Politico.
Here are the today’s swing state polls, updated as needed throughout the day:
Colorado: Obama 49%, Romney 45% (YouGov)
Florida: Romney 48%, Obama 44% (Caddell/McLaughlin)
Florida: Obama 49%, Romney 46% (We Ask America)
Florida: Obama 48%, Romney 46% (YouGov)
Iowa: Obama 48%, Romney 42% (YouGov)
Michigan: Obama 52%, Romney 38% (Detroit News)
Michgan: Obama 52%, Romney 38% (Glengariff)
Nevada: Obama 49%, Romney 46% (CNN/ORC)
Nevada: Obama 51%, Romney 43% (YouGov)
New Hampshire: Obama 47%, Romney 40% (YouGov)
North Carolina: Obama 46%, Romney 46% (YouGov)
Ohio: Obama 47%, Romney 44% (Caddell/McLaughlin)
Pennsylvania: Obama 48%, Romney 42% (We Ask America)
Virginia: Obama 48%, Romney 44% (YouGov)
Wisconsin: Obama 48%, Romney 46% (YouGov)
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) “is at the top of the Club for Growth’s target list for 2014,” Politico reports.
Said the group’s president, Chris Chocola: “If you’re looking to the horizon of 2014. the sun may rise over South Carolina,” adding that Graham “has not fared well on our score card.”
Wall Street Journal: “Mitt Romney’s plan to rebound from a tough stretch in his bid for the White House rests on stepping up campaigning in swing states, running more television ads and curtailing a fundraising push that has had him spending more time with donors in hotel ballrooms than with supporters at campaign rallies.”
“Still navigating a series of setbacks, Mr. Romney will hit the campaign trail harder than he has since the party conventions began at the end of August, with public events in Florida, Nevada, Colorado and Ohio in the next week.”
USA Today reports Romney will do a bus tour in Ohio.
A new USA Today/Gallup poll in 12 battleground states find voters are now significantly more enthusiastic about voting this fall than they were in June: 59% are either “extremely” or “very” enthusiastic, up from 46%.
But Democrats’ level of enthusiasm has increased more: “Thus, whereas equal percentages of Democrats and Republicans were enthusiastic in June, Democrats are now significantly more enthusiastic than Republicans, 73% vs. 64%.”
Huffington Post: “Mitt Romney’s campaign produced a 10-minute documentary film about the candidate that forced even liberal Democrats, when it was shown at the Republican National Convention, to admit that it was a moving portrayal of Romney’s life and values.”
“The problem is not very many people have seen the video, and the Romney campaign appears to have made little effort to change that. Romney revealed to donors in Atlanta on Wednesday that he himself had not seen the entire thing until it was shown before his remarks at a fundraiser.”
President Obama’s political team is providing “a textbook example of how an incumbent can harness the power of the office to bolster the case for re-election,” the New York Times reports.
“Every president lives at the intersection of policy and politics, never more so than during a campaign season. Locked in a tight race with Mitt Romney, Mr. Obama and his team have been pulling every lever of the federal government within reach, announcing initiatives aimed at critical constituencies, dispatching cabinet secretaries to competitive areas, coordinating campaign events to match popular government actions and forestalling or even reversing other government decisions that could hurt the president’s chances of a second term.”
Matt Latimer: “Napoleon Bonaparte reportedly said that he’d rather have a lucky general than a good one. That’s how Democrats are feeling these days about their president. Somewhere Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush are cursing the fates. What’s a guy got to do these days to lose an election?”
“It’s amazing when you consider it. For the last three years millions have been spent on campaign commercials, countless thousands have been devoted to campaign consultants and pollsters, many hundreds of people have been gathered in focus groups across the country to tell candidates what to say, and think, and even how to dress. And yet this election may simply come down to pure dumb luck. Historians one day may be asked to contemplate whether, in fact, Barack Obama is the luckiest person in American political history.”
Not only did Mitt Romney back down from his famous 47% remarks, First Read notes “he also softened his tone on health care, immigration, and gay rights.”
“Last night was the candidate many of us expected to start seeing in June or July, not in September — it was the Romney of 2004. And on health care, we have seen Romney make moderate-sounding remarks on the subject, but then he’s had to walk them back after receiving criticism from conservatives. That’s the thing to watch today: Will we see any conservative blowback about Romney’s comments last night? Or will conservatives cut him slack for the first time this campaign because he’s on the ropes? We know the campaign is exhausted from litigating every little thing with their conservative critics, especially since it believes it’s running a more ideologically conservative campaign than any Republican in a generation.”
Wall Street Journal: “Romney Softens Tone at Univision Forum.”
President Obama and Mitt Romney “will get the 60 Minutes treatment
this Sunday in separate interviews with different correspondents,” USA Today writes.
A Smart Politics review of broadcast media coverage of the 2012 campaign finds Mitt Romney “has been accused of being several wealthy fictional characters, from cartoons and comic strips (Scrooge McDuck, Richie Rich, Mr. Burns, Daddy Warbucks), classic British literature (Ebenezer Scrooge), film (Mr. Potter, Gordon Gekko), and even a board game (The Monopoly Man).”
Sen. John McCain compared a comment he made during his 2008 presidential bid to Mitt Romney’s 47% remark caught on hidden video, “which is similarly drawing heavy Democratic flak,” CNN reports.
Said McCain: “I don’t know if you remember when I said the fundamentals of the economy are strong even though we’re in a fiscal crisis – oh my god!”
“My campaign is about the 100 percent of America,”
— Mitt Romney, quoted by Politico, backing off his statement from earlier this year that he wouldn’t contend for the support of the 47% of Americans who don’t pay income taxes.
Mitt Romney’s campaign is airing two ads in Ohio “that include footage of the coal miners who lost pay because he campaigned at their mine,” the Columbus Dispatch reports.
“The footage is from Romney’s Aug. 14 campaign stop at the Century Mine in Beallsville, Ohio, owned by a subsidiary of Murray Energy Corp. It was later learned that the miners on stage were ordered out of the mine because of Romney’s campaign stop and were not paid for the portion of their shift that was canceled by the event.”
Mitt Romney this week has jumped on a 14-year-old clip of Barack Obama speaking about “redistribution” of wealth at a 1998 conference in Chicago.
However, NBC News “has obtained the entirety of the relevant remarks, which includes additional comments by Obama that weren’t included in the video circulated by Republicans. That omission features additional words of praise for ‘competition’ and the ‘marketplace’ by the then-state senator.”
Obama, from the whole clip: “I think the trick is figuring out how do we structure government systems that pool resources and hence facilitate some redistribution because I actually believe in redistribution, at least at a certain level to make sure that everybody’s got a shot. How do we pool resources at the same time as we decentralize delivery systems in ways that both foster competition, can work in the marketplace, and can foster innovation at the local level and can be tailored to particular communities.”
Maggie Haberman: “It’s a bit different than when the first sentence is isolated. Obama was
making two parallel pitches, for market competition and pooled
resources, in a fashion similar to how he has at other points in his
career… That line is one Obama almost certainly wishes he could get back – but it’s also why video archives of him talking about redistribution is unlikely to surprise swaths of voters.”
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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