Obama’s lead in Illinois not what it was

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On the eve of President Barack Obama’s acceptance speech to the Democratic National Convention last week, a statewide poll showed the native son was leading his Republican opponent by 17 percentage points here.

The poll of 1,382 likely Illinois voters was taken Sept. 5 by We Ask America. It had Obama at 54 percent to Mitt Romney’s 37 percent. Another 3.33 percent said they’d be voting for an unnamed third-party candidate, and 6 percent were undecided.

That’s way below where Obama was 4 years ago, when he won Illinois with 62 percent of the vote.

If you look at the 17-point spread between the two candidates, it’s a blowout, although not as big as his gigantic 25-point victory back in 2008.

If you look at where Obama’s numbers are right now (less than four points above 50 percent), you might consider that this race could have the potential to tighten up quite a bit, at least compared to 2008.

The spread is generally how polls are judged in the end, so if you’re a Republican, you probably shouldn’t get your hopes up too much.

According to the poll, Obama leads among Illinois women, 59-32, and even leads among men by a 48-43 margin. However, exit polling from 2008 showed that Obama won women by 29 points and men by 15 points, so he’s doing about the same with women, but tanking with men.

The survey, which had a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2.8 percentage points, has Obama with a huge 80-11 lead in Chicago. Some top Republicans have been saying they believed Romney could hit close to 20 percent in the city, which would give them a shot at being competitive statewide. That’s highly doubtful, according to this poll. However, 4 years ago, Obama won Chicago with 85 percent, so he’s not yet doing quite as well as he did back then.

President Obama leads Romney in suburban Cook County by a very substantial 60-30 margin. But, again, that’s not as wide as 2008, when he won the region by 34 points. Suburban Cook is the location of a ton of hotly contested congressional and state legislative races, so the Democrats will need all the help they can get. But Obama’s 30-point lead is still a whole lot better than Gov. Pat Quinn’s 14-point win 2 years ago, when the Democrats lost seats at the congressional and state levels.

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