Rasmussen (R) Virginia 2012 Presidential Poll
- Barack Obama 47% (44%) {51%} [49%] (45%)
- Mitt Romney 47% (45%) {42%} [43%] (46%)
- Mitt Romney 53% (52%) [40%]
- Barack Obama 35% (35%) [45%]
- Mitt Romney 55%
- Barack Obama 37%
- Barack Obama 55%
- Mitt Romney 40%
- Mitt Romney 53% (47%) / 46% (50%) {+7%}
- Strongly approve 35% (33%) {34%} [31%]
- Somewhat approve 14% (14%) {19%} [20%]
- Somewhat disapprove 10% (8%) {5%} [8%]
- Strongly disapprove 40% (43%) {40%} [38%]
- Yes 25%
- No 62%
- Excited about choices 53%
- Voting for lesser of two evils 40%
- Reason to vote for him 46%
- Reason to vote against him 35%
- Mitt Romney 48%
- Barack Obama 43%
Inside the numbers:
While Obama draws support from 95% of Virginia Democratic voters, Romney is backed by just 81% of voters in his own party.
While 11% of all Virginia voters prefer a candidate with mostly political experience, 10% prefer one with mostly business experience. But an overwhelming majority (76%) favors a candidate with a combination of political and business experience. Perhaps not surprisingly, Romney holds a wide lead among those who a favor candidate with a strong business background, while Obama draws heavy support from those who favor a candidate with more political experience. Romney holds a slight 49% to 45% edge among those who favor a combination of the two.
Forty-two percent (42%) of Old Dominion voters agree with Romney on most important issues, while another eight percent (8%) say they agree with him on just about everything. By comparison, 36% agree with the president on most important issues, and twelve percent (12%) more agree with him on nearly everything.
When it comes to the candidates themselves, 53% of Virginia voters believe Obama and Romney disagree on most important issues, while another 31% believe they disagree on just about everything.
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