Why Mitt Romney had a good month
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Mitt Romney has had a good month, numbers-wise. That does not mean he鈥檚 suddenly become the favorite for November 鈥 the 2012 presidential horse race is fairly stable and remains essentially tied. Nor does it indicate that Friday鈥檚 stinker of a jobs report by itself makes a Romney victory more probable. Many other important economic indicators will be released in the months to come.
What it means is that Mr. Romney has improved on the margins in some important underlying indicators and thus may be less vulnerable than Democrats believe to some of the Obama camp鈥檚 favorite attacks.
(Yes, that鈥檚 a mouthful. We鈥檙e trying to keep pesky political scientists from blogging that we鈥檝e gone wild and crazy and overinterpreted a few poll results.)
For the presumptive GOP nominee, the most important trend of May might be that voters are judging him a bit more positively. In the latest Gallup results, from earlier this month, his favorable rating hit a new high of 50 percent. His unfavorable rating is 41, meaning he鈥檚 at a plus-8 in this overall measurement.
As recently as February, Romney鈥檚 Gallup favorable was only 39 percent. What鈥檚 changed is that Republicans鈥 views of him have gotten much more positive, rising by 22 percentage points in the past three months. He鈥檚 doing better among independents, too, with a corresponding 11-point increase.
What鈥檚 fueling this? Perhaps it鈥檚 the simple fact that he beat all his GOP rivals. Winners look better just for having won.
鈥淧residential candidates typically get a spike in their favorable ratings in the wake of winning the nomination,鈥 writes .
Other polls show this same movement, though not all have Romney鈥檚 personal popularity at more than 50 percent. For instance, a new Washington Post-ABC survey has Romney with a 41 percent approval rating, up from 35 percent a month ago. President Obama still leads Romney in this measure 鈥 52 percent of Americans view the incumbent positively, according to Post/ABC numbers. But the gap is narrowing. In April Mr. Obama led in approval by 21 points. Now it鈥檚 11, according to this survey.
And this surge happened at a time when the Obama campaign was increasingly turning its attention to an attempt to define Romney in a negative manner. Remember all that stuff about Romney鈥檚 record at Bain Capital?
Plus, Romney has not exactly had easy treatment from the press. There was the Washington Post report about the teen Romney leading a hair-cutting bully attack, plus all the will-Mitt-repudiate-Donald-Trump stories. It鈥檚 possible all that will show up in a future survey or be taken into account in some longer-term manner. But at the moment it doesn鈥檛 appear to be driving Romney down in the polls.
While expected, 鈥渢he recuperation in Mr. Romney鈥檚 favorability numbers ... reduces the risk that his personal qualities might cause him to lose an election that he otherwise would have won,鈥 wrote New York Times polling analyst Nate Silver on his recently.
The other number that鈥檚 looking a bit better for Romney is his rating with Republican women. In the Post/ABC poll, his approval rating among GOP-leaning women has jumped to 80 percent, up from 59 percent the month before.
Romney still rates poorly among Democratic women. That pushes his overall favorable rating among women down to 40 percent. But the gains among women in his own party have virtually closed his gender gap, at least in this latest survey. Women and men view him in about the same light.
Overall, the of major polls has Obama maintaining a slight edge over Romney of 2.5 percentage points.