President Barack
Obama, picking up support following the Democratic National Convention,
widened his narrow lead over Republican U.S. presidential challenger
Mitt Romney in a new Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Saturday.
The latest daily tracking poll
showed Obama, a Democrat, with a lead of 4 percentage points over
Romney. Forty-seven percent of 1,457 likely voters surveyed online over
the previous four days said they would vote for Obama if the November 6
elections were held today, compared with 43 percent for Romney.
"The
bump is actually happening. I know there was some debate whether it
would happen... but it's here," said Ipsos pollster Julia Clark,
referring to the "bounce" in support that many presidential candidates
enjoy after nominating conventions.
Obama had leapfrogged Romney in the daily tracking poll on Friday with a lead of 46 percent to 44 percent.
The
president's lead comes despite a mixed reaction to his convention
speech on Thursday night in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Friday's
government data showing that jobs growth slowed sharply last month.
Obama's
lead over Romney is comparable to Romney's former lead over the
president after the Republican National Convention finished last week,
Clark said.
"We don't have another
convention now to turn our attention to, so (Obama's bounce) may
maintain," Clark said. "How big it'll be and how long it will last
remains to be seen."
Obama
increased his lead over Romney in certain favorable characteristics.
Asked who was more "eloquent," 50 percent of the 1,720 registered voters
questioned in the poll favored Obama, compared to 25 percent for
Romney. Asked about being "smart enough for the job," 46 percent sided
with Obama compared to 37 percent for Romney.
In
fact, Obama led Romney in a dozen such favorable characteristics, such
as "represents America" or "has the right values." The only such
category in which Romney had an advantage was being "a man of faith," as
44 percent picked Romney, who is Mormon, compared to 31 percent for
Obama, who is Christian.
The
Democratic National Convention itself received a rather muted response
in the poll. Of those registered voters who had heard, seen or read at
least something about it, 41 percent rated it as "average" and 29
percent as "good."
The Republican
National Convention that wrapped up August 30 in Tampa, Florida
similarly was rated "average" by 38 percent and "good" by 27 percent in
Saturday's polling results.
The
precision of the Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using a
credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility interval
of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points.
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