James Freeman, Wall Street Journal
To political pros, they are known as "the persuadables." By Nov. 6, swing voters in a handful of states will decide whether to rehire Barack Obama. Right now, no one's studying these voters more closely than Steven Law, president of American Crossroads. Mr. Law, who aims to spend $300 million to defeat Mr. Obama and liberalism generally, likes what he sees.The 52-year-old former Republican Senate aide says that centrist voters are moving away from the president. The sense that President Obama is "a fine person" but lacks the ability to solve the country's...
To political pros, they are known as "the persuadables." By Nov. 6, swing voters in a handful of states will decide whether to rehire Barack Obama. Right now, no one's studying these voters more closely than Steven Law, president of American Crossroads. Mr. Law, who aims to spend $300 million to defeat Mr. Obama and liberalism generally, likes what he sees.The 52-year-old former Republican Senate aide says that centrist voters are moving away from the president. The sense that President Obama is "a fine person" but lacks the ability to solve the country's...
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