Polling Note: How Paul Ryan Can Help Romney - East Idaho News
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Polling Note: How Paul Ryan Can Help Romney

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GETTY P 081112 RomneyRyanWave?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1344699613120Win McNamee/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) — Paul Ryan is little known, was not in broad demand as Mitt Romney’s VP pick and authored a budget plan that, while popular in the GOP base, stepped into the red zone on the subject of Medicare. His selection seems like an attempt both to rally Republican loyalists and to channel the public’s substantial concern about the deficit. But given the sensitivity of Medicare, there is risk.

Americans asked in February if they trusted Obama “to make the right decisions” on Medicare, most Americans said they did, 58-41 percent. But most did not trust Romney on the issue; that was 42-52 percent (Poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation, 2/12).

Reaching back to Ryan’s budget plan:

-In ABC News / Washington Post polling from 6/11, Americans opposed the Ryan budget plan by 50-32 percent; and the public preferred Medicare as it is, rather than as a voucher plan, by a broad 65-34 percent. Time hasn’t changed that. In a Kaiser poll last February Americans opposed changing Medicare even more broadly, by 70-25 percent.

-Finally, at the time of the budget debate, Obama led the Republicans in Congress in trust to “protect the Medicare system” by a 15-point margin, 49-35 percent. (Again, ABC/Post 6/11)

Among related questions is whether the Medicare changes Ryan proposed may hamper Republican efforts to paint Obama’s health care reform as unjustified social engineering. Many Americans are resistant to change in health care programs from either side of the aisle, given the uncertainties change implies. (Of course, Romney’s own record on health care reform itself complicates this line of attack.)

Will it matter? In Kaiser’s poll in February, 23 percent said Medicare is an issue on which they could only support a presidential candidate who shares their views. Sixty-two percent called it “just one of many issues,” 14 percent, not an issue. Twenty-three percent is not an insubstantial number in this regard – but Romney, not Ryan, is the presidential candidate, and it’s the top of the ticket that drives the vote.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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