President Barack Obama would have a battle on his hands.  According to a Rasmussen poll out today:

If the 2012 presidential election were held today, President Obama and possible Republican nominee Mitt Romney would be all tied up at 45% each, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

The president, seeking a second four-year term, beats another potential GOP rival, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, by six points ā€“ 48% to 42%.

In both match-ups, seven percent (7%) like some other candidate, with three percent (3%) undecided. (read the rest)

Margin of error is (-/+ 3)

Like Iā€™ve said before Iā€™m not convinced that Governor Palin is running in 2012.  Mitt Romney definitely is as heā€™s pretty much been in full-time campaign mode.  I would have also been interested in seeing match-ups with other potential GOP candidates just for curiosityā€™s sake.

Right now a poll this far out doesnā€™t mean much.  I think unless things turn around pretty quickly in the economy, things are going to continue to get worse for President Obama.  Iā€™m not sure how well Governor Romney will continue to fare either when people realize what an utter failure RomneyCare in Massachusetts has been.

Update:

Again want to emphasize this is one poll, and as Wickle so aptly noted, it isnā€™t being held today.  Josh Painter while parsing todayā€™s poll said the only ones who could take any solace from this poll are Romney and Palin.

Groups of political animals with different interests will be posturing all week long based on this poll. Romney backers, for example, will be crowing loudly over it, and we don’t want to rain on their parade. After all, their guy made a good showing, and they should have some fun with it. While we don’t think this merits a ticker tape parade, if they are looking for an excuse to party, this should qualify. 

Sarah Palin’s backers can also find some encouragement in the latest Rasmussen numbers. Being just six points back of the president, after another poll — one conducted by Democrat polling firm Public Policy Polling in mid-March — showed Obama with a 20-point lead over Palin in the same hypothetical circumstances. If one were to say the PPP poll is as accurate as the Rasmussen survey (which Democrats always do; Republicans will argue the point in Scott Rasmussen’s favor), then Governor Palin has made a 14-point improvement against Obama in just four months. An April PPP poll had Obama ahead of Palin 53 percent to 41 percent — a twelve-point spread. Today’s Rasmussen results indicate that Gov. Palin has cut that lead in half in less than three months. But the 2012 elections are still years away, and Sarah Palin has not even started to campaign actively for 2012, if indeed she intends to do so.

The only group which will find nothing to help them put a positive spin on today’s poll news is the collective of Obama fans. These results tend to support other Rasmussen polling which shows the president at his lowest approval rating since taking the oath of office in January. This is what Obama’s supporters have feared the most.

2nd Update: To back up what I was saying about  Mitt Romney and his awful health care plan potentially kneecapping his 2012 presidential bid, I give you exhibit A and exhibit B.  "Heā€™ll have to find a way to distance himself from it to have a shot at the GOP nomination in 2012.ā€  I donā€™t see how that is possible since he touted it in 2008.

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