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Undecided voters lean from Romney toward Obama

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During the Republican primaries, Romney stressed his conservatism. In recent days he has tried to moderate his image, talking about the universal health care law he championed as governor of Massachusetts and airing advertisements that stress his concern for the poor.

But the party’s conservative stands have clearly worked against him with some voters. Kimmel, for example, a 49-year-old independent who lives near Lansing, Mich., had considered supporting Romney for much of the year, in part because of the arguments made by her husband, a small-business owner who fears the impact of Obama’s health care and economic policies.

“We make more than $250,000 a year, and so he’s going to get creamed on the taxes,” she said.

“I had been leaning Republican,” she said, but then she began to hear more about the party’s positions on gay rights and abortion, a topic the Obama campaign has hammered home with suburban women voters in swing states. She fears Republicans would seek to restrict abortion even in cases when a woman’s life is endangered — a position Romney does not advocate.

“I was disappointed,” she said, “like, so disappointed that I was ready to vote for the Democrats instead.”

Her husband keeps urging her to vote for Romney, she added, “but I can’t tell him that I’m going to do that because of the stances on other things.”

Gray, 28, a restaurant manager in Indianapolis, cast his first presidential vote for George W. Bush in 2004. Undecided earlier this summer, he now shares some of Kimmel’s concern, mentioning the move by some Republicans to use the term “forcible rape” to limit when abortions should be allowed in cases of sexual assault.

“It may not sound like much, but that’s really detrimental against women’s rights,” he said. “Rape is rape. You don’t need the word ‘forcible’ added to it.”

Republicans “have just kind of doubled down on crazy lately,” he said.

But it was Romney’s videotaped remarks about the 47 percent, which was made before an audience of major donors at a fundraiser, that “really stuck with me,” he said.

“He really showed who he truly was by speaking in private to those guys. He really just came off as not caring and as ignorant,” Gray said. “He doesn’t know what true middle-class income is. And that’s because he doesn’t know anything outside his own privileged life to know what the average American makes or does for a living.”

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