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

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In the battlegrounds with the most electoral votes this time, demographics, local issues and competing voter-turnout operations could make the difference.

—OHIO (18 electoral votes): Polls indicate that Obama leads by about 3 percentage points in the state that decided the 2004 election. Since mid-October, Romney has led in just one of past 30 Ohio surveys.

“This election reminds me very much of 2004 in Ohio,” said John Green, who directs the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron. “We had the incumbent president, George W. Bush, coming in with a lead, a small lead, and he ended up being able to sustain that and he ended up winning.”

Early voting appears to favor Obama in the state, though not by the same margins he built four years ago, when he carried it by 5 percentage points. Across the Midwest, the 2009 auto bailout has given Obama an advantage, but nowhere more than Ohio.

—FLORIDA (29 electoral votes): Florida, the decisive state in 2000, has shown more divergence in recent public polling than any other major state. One survey put Romney ahead by 6 percentage points; others showed Obama leading by a point or two. Obama carried the state by less than 3 percentage points four years ago, and it might be a surprise if he won by even that much again. Democrats won’t be shocked if he loses it.

Susan MacManus, a University of South Florida political scientist, said the result could come down to generational politics: if voters over the age of 50, who favor Romney, turn out more heavily than the younger voters who put Obama over the top in 2008, the Republican ticket will prevail.

The Latino vote is a wild card in Florda. Projections by the nonpartisan survey firm Latino Decisions are that Obama will carry the Latino vote by at least 40 percentage points over Romney nationwide. Co-founder Matt Barreto, a University of Washington political scientist, said that if Latinos turn out at the high rates his firm is expecting, they could help Obama carry Florida and three other states, Nevada, Colorado and Virginia.

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