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Signs point to an Obama victory, but Romney isn’t out of it

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Insiders in both campaigns say they will be closely watching three states—Ohio, Wisconsin and Virginia—for clues to the outcome of the election.

On Monday, as the sun set on their prolonged and bitter campaign battle, Obama and Romney converged on Columbus, Ohio, the key swing area of the nation’s most celebrated battleground state, which has gotten more candidate attention than any other.

Obama also campaigned in Wisconsin and Iowa, while Romney appeared in Florida, Virginia and New Hampshire.

Romney has sought to add Pennsylvania to that mix, scheduling an Election Day stop in Pittsburgh, along with another in Cleveland. Obama planned to spend Tuesday in his hometown of Chicago, where he cast an early ballot last month.

Carrying Ohio—which he won four years ago—would open up a clear path to 270 electoral votes for the president. To win re-election, Obama would need to add only Wisconsin, assuming his advantage holds in Nevada and other states regarded as likely to go Democratic. But Wisconsin, the home state of Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, is not a given. Recent polling shows Obama ahead by three or more points, though a recent campaign poll had his lead down to a single percentage point. Another had him ahead by five.

If Obama loses Ohio, he’ll need to make up the difference by carrying Colorado, Iowa and New Hampshire; late polling showed him with at least a marginal lead in all three. A Virginia win would give him breathing room and could be an early sign that he is headed for victory.

Romney’s electoral math is more complicated, but almost certainly requires winning Ohio. A loss there would force him to pick up other states, including Wisconsin, Colorado and New Hampshire. He’d also have to carry Virginia and Florida.

Under the system laid out in the 1700s by the framers of the Constitution, a presidential election is actually a series of separate elections, rather than a single national one. The 538 electoral votes represent the sum of winner-take-all results in 48 states and the District of Columbia; also included are individual electoral votes from districts in Maine and Nebraska, which may differ from the statewide result under laws in those states. As recently as 2000, the winner of the nationwide popular vote (Al Gore) lost the electoral vote.

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