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Undecided voters lean from Romney toward Obama

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Over the past year, he has been listening for a compelling reason to back Romney. In the poll, he said he leaned toward the challenger. Indeed, Hubscher epitomizes the profile of a voter Romney should have been able to count on: a suburban, white, 50-year-old man who manages a business, thinks of himself as a Republican and has been disappointed with Obama after voting for him in 2008.

And yet, a little more than five weeks before the election, he now leans toward giving the president another term. “I kind of feel like he hasn’t fulfilled the promises he set out, so maybe we should look in a different direction,” he said. “But I’m not really feeling the Republicans have put forth a candidate to replace him.

“I just don’t think Romney has made his case,” he said, citing a lack of specifics in Romney’s campaign pledges.

Hubscher watched the Republican convention and was deeply impressed by Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida. “I felt a connection to the things he was talking about,” he said. By contrast, Romney, who spoke later the same night, made little impression. His campaign, Hubscher said, boils down to, “ ‘Look what a bad job Obama’s done, and I’m not that guy.’ That’s not good enough.”

Even among Romney backers, that sense of disappointment came up frequently. When asked what they remembered of the two party conventions, only one of the four dozen interviewed brought up Romney’s speech.

Some clearly do embrace his core message. “The economy is a business. What makes it work is thinking like a businessman,” said James Johnson, 43, who does security work for a manufacturing firm in Tulsa, Okla.

But most who said they would vote for Romney couched their choice as opposition to the incumbent.

“I will vote for Romney, but I’m voting against Obama. I wish we had a better representative,” said John L. Nelson, 78, a retired department head at an electrical transformer plant near St. Louis.

“In politics it’s very useful to be articulate, to be able to make your case. This is the thing Reagan did,” Nelson said. “Romney does not have the skill.”

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