Sunday, October 24, 2010

Kasich Strickland race tightening


From Dayton Daily News…
Gap closing between Kasich and Strickland, latest poll shows
The race has tightened since last month’s survey of likely voters in the November election.
By William Hershey, Columbus Bureau
Updated 11:42 PM Saturday, October 23, 2010

COLUMBUS — Democratic incumbent Ted Strickland and Republican John Kasich are in a neck-and-neck scramble in the governor’s race heading into the final week of campaigning, according to a new Dayton Daily News/Ohio Newspaper poll.
Their support is roughly even among likely voters: Kasich, 
49 percent; Strickland, 47 percent, with 5 percent undecided or backing another candidate.
The results are within the poll’s 3.3 percent margin of error and show a slight tightening of the race since the most recent Ohio Newspaper Poll was released Sept. 27. In that poll, Kasich led by four percentage points.
The Daily News and the seven other largest newspapers in Ohio commissioned the polls to examine voter attitudes in the final weeks of an election widely seen as critical to Ohio’s future.
With the race so close, the winner will be determined by which side does a better job of getting out the vote, said Eric Rademacher, co-director of the University of Cincinnati’s Institute for Policy Research, which did the poll for the newspapers. And on the enthusiasm quotient, he said, Kasich appears to have an edge.
“It’s a close race, but the dynamics, especially the advantage the Republicans have in turnout, still favor Kasich,” said Rademacher.
In the poll, 53 percent of Strickland backers said they might change their minds before Nov. 2, while 47 percent of Kasich supporters said they might switch.
Poll respondent Gwen Frisby, 29, of Sidney, is one of those who said she could change her mind. But said she will likely vote for Strickland.
“I think he’s done as well as could be expected right now,” said Frisby, a stay-at-home mom with three children and another one on the way.
Frisby doesn’t like Republican TV ads blaming Strickland for the economic downturn. “I don’t think this is his fault,” she said. “I think it’s a lot of people’s fault.”
Jay Merrick, 76, of Huber Heights, a retiree, is not one of those wavering. He is firmly behind Kasich.
“He’s not Ted Strickland,” explained Merrick, who served 20 years in the Air Force and then 25 years as a civilian employee. “I just don’t like Strickland. I don’t like anything the Democrats are doing.”
In contrast to the tight governor’s race, the U.S. Senate race appears to be a blowout, with Republican Rob Portman, the former Cincinnati-area congressman who was budget director and U.S. trade representative under President George W. Bush, leading Democratic Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher, 58-39 percent. Portman led in the earlier poll 55-40 percent.

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