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The 'mushy middle' hard to reach for Obama, McCain ... REPORT: "They're the most fickle voters, and potentially the most powerful. Thus, with party nominations secure, John McCain and Barack Obama now are pushing toward the center to win them over. Meet the "mushy middle," a complex chunk of people likely to decide the presidential election but difficult to reach and hard to please. "Yes, we can!" isn't floating their boat. Nothing much is, from either candidate. They aren't uniformly conservative or liberal, and they don't fit strict Republican or Democratic orthodoxy. They aren't typically engaged in politics, and they don't much care about the campaign. And like so many others, they are extraordinarily pessimistic ..." MORE

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Obama even with Clinton in New Hampshire

By Reuters | Today's Top News

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Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are locked in a dead heat among New Hampshire voters ahead of the state's primary contest next month, according to a USA Today/Gallup Poll released on Friday.

Clinton, a New York senator and former first lady, and Obama, an Illinois senator, are tied at 32 percent, with former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards at 18 percent, according to the poll.

New Hampshire is one of the hotly contested early primaries in the state-by-state process to pick the Democratic and Republican candidates who will face off in the November 4, 2008 presidential election.

In the tightening Republican race there, Mitt Romney, former governor of neighboring Massachusetts, leads Arizona Sen. John McCain 34 percent to 27 percent.

Just last month most New Hampshire polls showed Clinton and Romney with double-digit leads, USA Today said.

Among other Republicans, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who has largely bypassed New Hampshire to focus on later contests in larger states, has 11 percent. He is effectively tied for third place with former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Texas Rep. Ron Paul, each with 9 percent, USA Today reported.

USA Today said the survey's fundamental finding is uncertainty, with more than 40 percent of voters in both parties saying they might change their minds before the January 8 primary.

The USA Today/Gallup Poll of 1,536 Democratic and Republican likely voters and independents leaning toward each party was taken Monday through Wednesday. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.

Posted on Friday, December 21, 2007 at 05:27:01 AM
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