Tuesday, July 17, 2012

New Hampshire Poll

  • President Barack Obama holds a narrower lead over Republican challenger Mitt Romney in New Hampshire, according to a new poll.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • Mitt Romney is gaining on President Obama in the swing state of New Hampshire, according to a WMUR poll published Tuesday.
  • (The Boston Globe)
  • New Hampshire is a net energy exporter However, a February 2012 UNH poll shows support is actually slightly larger than opposition, and Skelton noted there is support for the project outside of the North Country.
  • (Hotair.com)
  • President Barack Obamas advantage over Mitt Romney has narrowed in New Hampshire, according to a new poll released Tuesday, with Obama taking 49% of likely voters with Romney at 45%.
  • (KCRA.com)
  • President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney for New Hampshires four important electoral votes in the November presidential election is now a statistical dead heat.
  • (NewHampshire.com (blog))
  • A new poll commissioned by the Jackie Cilley campaign shows that while New Hampshire voters know their gubernatorial candidates better now than they did in the spring, there is still no clear favorite in the race.
  • (Concord Monitor)
  • On the polling front, there were new polls out in Iowa and New Hampshire that look superficially good for Mr. Obama — he held leads of five points and four points in those surveys.
  • (New York Times)
  • Others thought to be under consideration include Christie, New Hampshire Senator Kelly Ayotte, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, South Dakota Senator John Thune and Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan.
  • (Reuters UK)
  • Mother Nature almost wound up playing a role on Sunday as Sprint Cup drivers took to the New Hampshire race track for 301 laps of racing. Kyle Busch picked off the poll for the event. Kyle Busch stated that the Interstate Camry has been fast all weekend.
  • (RealClearSports)
  • And were likely to see a lot more in the weeks ahead, but only two states have changed, Michigan and New Hampshire. Both of them went from lean Obama, based on recent polls to tossup states.
  • (FOX News)

No comments:

Post a Comment