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US Presidential Election 2012 Opinion Poll,US Presidential election exit poll, US Presidential election SURVEY RESULT, who will win in America polls 2012, exit poll,American Polls expected win, US Presidential Election 2012 Updates

US Presidential Election 2012 Opinion Poll,US Presidential election exit poll, US Presidential election SURVEY RESULT, who will win in America polls 2012, exit poll,American Polls expected win, US Presidential Election 2012 Updates

 

Since convention nominations

In almost all the opinion polls conducted so far, incumbent Barack Obama seems to be winning the race in order to be selected as US president for second consequetive year 2012.

Two-way race

 

 

Poll sourceDateDemocratic
Candidate
 %Republican
Candidate
 %Leading by %Sample
Size*
Margin of Error (MoE)
RCP Average October 22 – November 4, 2012 Barack Obama 48.8% Mitt Romney 48.1% 0.7 -- --
Rasmussen Tracking November 2–4, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 49% 1 1,500 LV ±3.0
CNN/Opinion Research November 2–4, 2012 Barack Obama 50% Mitt Romney 48% 2 918 RV ±3%
CNN/Opinion Research November 2–4, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 49% Tie 693 LV ±3.5%
Gallup Tracking November 1–4, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 46% 3 2,854 RV ±2%
Gallup Tracking November 1–4, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 50% 1 2,551 LV ±2%
Democracy Corps November 1–4, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 45% 4 1,080 LV ±3.0%
Ipsos/Reuters October 31–November 4, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 42% 6 5,158 RV ±3.0%
Ipsos/Reuters October 31–November 4, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 47% 1 3,805 LV ±3.4%
Angus Reid Public Opinion November 1–3, 2012 Barack Obama 51% Mitt Romney 48% 3 1,050 LV ±3.1%
PPP/Americans United for Change November 1–3, 2012 Barack Obama 50% Mitt Romney 47% 3 1,200 LV ±2.8%
NBC News/Wall Street Journal November 1–3, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 47% 1 1,475 LV ±2.6%
Rasmussen Tracking November 1–3, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 49% Tie 3,000(?) LV ±2.5%
Pew Research October 31–November 3, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 42% 7 3,151 RV ±2.0%
Pew Research October 31–November 3, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 45% 3 2,709 LV ±2.2%
YouGov October 31–November 3, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 47% 2 36,472 LV  ?
ABC News/Washington Post October 31–November 3, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 2,069 LV ±2.5%
PPP/Americans United for Change October 30– November 1, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,200 LV ±2.8%
Politico/George Washington University/Battleground October 29–November 1, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 49% 1 1,000 LV ±3.1%
Washington Times/JZ Analytics October 29–31, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 49% Tie 800 LV ±3.5%
ABC News/Wash Post October 28–31, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,293 LV ±3%
UPI/CVOTER October 15–31, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 3,633 LV ±3.5% (?)
Fox News October 28–30, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 45% 1 1,230 RV ±3%
Fox News October 28–30, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 46% Tie 1,128 LV ±3%
JZAnalytics October 28–30, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 48% 3 1,015 LV ±3.1%
High Point University October 22–30, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 43% 3 805 RV ±3.5%
Rasmussen Tracking October 27–29, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 49% 2 1,500 LV ±3.0%
YouGov/The Economist October 26–28, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 46% 2 757 RV ±4.6%
YouGov/The Economist October 26–28, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 47% 1 688 LV ±4.6%
United Technologies/National Journal October 25–28, 2012 Barack Obama 50% Mitt Romney 45% 5 713 LV ±4.4%
CBS News/New York Times October 25–28, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 47% 1 563 LV ±4.0%
ABC News/Washington Post October 25–28, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 49% Tie 1,259 LV ±3.5%
DailyKos/PPP/SEIU October 25–28, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 49% Tie 1,400 LV ±2.6%
Pew Research October 24–28, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 45% 2 1,678 RV ±2.8%
Pew Research October 24–28, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 47% Tie 1,495 LV ±2.9%
Ipsos/Reuters October 24–28, 2012 Barack Obama 51% Mitt Romney 39% 12 1,133 RV ±3.3%
Ipsos/Reuters October 24–28, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 46% 3 795 LV ±4.0%
Gallup Tracking October 22–28, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 48% Tie 3,050 RV ±2%
Gallup Tracking October 22–28, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 51% 5 2,700 LV ±2%
Investor's Business Daily/TIPP October 22–27, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 44% 1 942 LV ±3.5%
National Public Radio October 23–25, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,000 LV ±3.1%
Politico/George Washington University/Battleground October 22–25, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,000 LV ±3.1%
PPP/Americans United for Change October 22–24, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,200 LV ±2.8%
ABC News/Washington Post October 21–24, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 50% 3 1,386 LV ±3.0%
Associated Press/GFK October 19–23, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 40% 8 1,186 adults ±3.5%
Associated Press/GFK October 19–23, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 44% 1 1,041 RV ±3.5%
Associated Press/GFK October 19–23, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 47% 2 839 LV ±4.2%
IBD/TIPP October 17–22, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 45% 2 938 LV ±3.5%
Rasmussen Tracking October 20–22, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 50% 4 1,500 LV ±3%
ABC News/Wash Post October 18–21, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,376 LV ±3%
Monmouth/SurveyUSA/Braun October 18–21, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 48% 3 1,402 LV ±2.6%
Gallup Tracking October 14–20, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 52% 7 2,700 LV ±2%
Gallup Tracking October 14–20, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 49% 3 3,050 RV ±2%
Washington Times/JZ Analytics October 18–20, 2012 Barack Obama 50% Mitt Romney 47% 3 800 LV ±3.5%
CBS News October 17–20, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 46% 2 790 LV ±4%
NBC News/Wall Street Journal October 17–20, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 47% Tie 816 LV ±3.4%
NBC News/Wall Street Journal October 17–20, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 44% 5 1,000 RV ±3.1%
PPP/Americans United for Change October 17–19, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 47% 2 1,200 LV ±2.8%
Politico/George Washington University/Battleground October 15–18, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 49% 2 1,000 LV ±3.1%
UConn/Hartford Courant October 11–16, 2012 Barack Obama 48% Mitt Romney 45% 3 1,023 LV ±3%
Rasmussen Reports October 13–15, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 49% 2 1,500 LV ±3.0%
IBD/TIPP Tracking October 10–15, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 45% 2 931 LV ±3.5%
Gallup Tracking October 9–15, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 50% 4 2,700 LV ±2.0%
Washington Post-ABC News October 10–13, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 46% 3 923 LV ±3.5%
Washington Post-ABC News October 10–13, 2012 Barack Obama 50% Mitt Romney 43 7 1,063 RV ±3.5%
Angus Reid Public Opinion October 10–11, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 47% Tie 906 RV ±3.5%
Politico/George Washington University/Battleground October 7–11, 2012 Barack Obama 49% Mitt Romney 48% 1 1,000 LV ±3.1%
Reuters/Ipsos October 7–11, 2012 Barack Obama 44% Mitt Romney 47% 3 1,092 LV ±3.4%
Fox News October 7–9, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 44% 2 1,204 RV ±3%
Fox News October 7–9, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 46% 1 1,109 LV ±3%
Zogby / JZAnalytics October 5–7, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 45% Tie 800 LV ±3.5%
Investor's Business Daily/TIPP October 4–9, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 47% 1 812 LV ±3.5%
Pew Research Center October 4–7, 2012 Barack Obama 46% Mitt Romney 46% Tie 1,201 RV ±3.3%
Pew Research Center October 4–7, 2012 Barack Obama 45% Mitt Romney 49% 4 1,112 LV ±3.4%
Gallup Tracking October 4–6, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 47% Tie 1,387 RV ±3.0%
PPP/Daily Kos & SEIU October 4–7, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 49% 2 1,300 LV ±2.7%
Rasmussen Reports October 4–7, 2012 Barack Obama 47% Mitt Romney 49% 2 1,500 LV ±3.0%

 

If we look at it state wise then according to Fox reports

 

The president leads by 7 percentage points in both Ohio (49%-42%) and Virginia (50%-43%), Fox says. In Florida -- where Obama campaigns today --- he leads Romney, 49%-44%. 

In the survey of  887 likely Latino voters, 48 percent believe U.S. voters would have been ready to elect a Latino president this year, while 40 percent said no and 12 percent were undecided.

Obama is nearly matching his 2008 support in these key states while Romney is under-performing compared to Republican John McCain,” says Democratic pollster Chris Anderson, who conducts the Fox News poll with Republican pollster Daron Shaw.

*RV means "registered voters"; LV means "likely voters"

source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nationwide_opinion_polling_for_the_United_States_presidential_election,_2012

 

 

 

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