President Barack Obama handily
defeated Gov. Mitt Romney and won himself a second term Tuesday after a
bitter and historically expensive race that was primarily fought in
just a handful of battleground states. Obama beat Romney after nabbing
almost every one of the crucial battleground states.
The Romney campaign's last-ditch
attempt to put blue-leaning Midwestern swing states in play failed as
Obama's Midwestern firewall sent the president back to the White House
for four more years. Obama picked up the swing states of New Hampshire,
Michigan, New Mexico, Iowa, Virginia, Wisconsin, Colorado, Nevada,
Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and Ohio. Of the swing states, Romney only
picked up North Carolina. Florida is still too close to call, but even
if Romney won the state, Obama still handily beats him in the Electoral
College vote. The popular vote will most likely be much narrower than
the president's decisive Electoral College victory.
The Obama victory marks an end
to a years-long campaign that saw historic advertisement spending
levels, countless rallies and speeches, and three much-watched debates.
The Romney campaign cast the
election as a referendum on Obama's economic policies, frequently
comparing him to former President Jimmy Carter and asking voters the
Reagan-esque question of whether they are better off than they were
four years ago. But the Obama campaign pushed back on the referendum
framing, blanketing key states such as Ohio early on with ads painting
him as a multimillionaire more concerned with profits than people. The
Obama campaign also aggressively attacked Romney on reproductive rights
issues, tying Romney to a handful of Republican candidates who made
controversial comments about rape and abortion.
These
ads were one reason Romney faced a steep likeability problem for most
of the race, until his expert performance at the first presidential
debate in Denver in October. After that debate, and a near universal
panning of Obama's performance, Romney caught up with Obama in national
polls, and almost closed his favoribility gap with the president. In
polls, voters consistently gave him an edge over Obama on who would
handle the economy better and create more jobs, even as they rated
Obama higher on caring about the middle class.
But the president's Midwestern
firewall--and the campaign's impressive grassroots operation--carried
him through. Ohio tends to vote a bit more Republican than the nation
as a whole, but Obama was able to stave off that trend and hold an edge
there over Romney, perhaps due to the president's support of the auto
bailout three years ago. Romney and his running mate Paul Ryan all but
moved to Ohio in the last weeks of the campaign, trying and ultimately
failing to erase Obama's lead there.
A shrinking electoral
battleground this year meant that only 14 states were really seen as in
play, and both candidates spent most of their time and money there.
Though national polls showed the two candidates in a dead heat, Obama
consistently held a lead in the states that mattered. That, and his
campaign's much-touted get out the vote efforts and overall ground
game, may be what pushed Obama over the finish line.
Now, Obama heads back to office
facing what will most likely be bitterly partisan negotiations over
whether the Bush tax cuts should expire. The House will still be
majority Republican, with Democrats maintaining their majority in the
Senate.
No comments:
Post a Comment