Politics
Election 2012: Obama attacks on taxes and Bain hit Romney ratings
U.S. President Barack Obama (l) and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (r). PHOTO/AP
(Reuters) – Sustained attacks by President Barack Obama’s campaign on Republican rival Mitt Romney’s business history and refusal to release more tax records appear to be working, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed on Tuesday.
More than a third of voters who are registered to a party or as an independent said in the online survey that what they had heard about Romney’s taxes and his time at Bain Capital private equity firm had given them a less favorable impression of the Republican candidate.
And particularly worrying for Romney is that a large slice of independent voters, whom he needs to win the November 6 election, are also buying into the Obama campaign’s portrayal of him as a ruthless businessman who may be hiding something in his taxes.
“With three-quarters of registered voters saying they’ve heard at least a little about these issues, I would say the Obama campaign has been successful in raising them to the national conscience,” said Ipsos pollster Julia Clark.
After weeks of accusations from Obama and his allies that Romney cut U.S. jobs and sent them overseas while he headed Bain, 36 percent of registered voters said the issue had made them see Romney less favorably, compared to 18 percent who said they were now more favorable toward the former governor of Massachusetts.
Among independents, 26 percent regarded him less favorably and 13 percent more favorably after hearing about his business tenure.
The Romney campaign counters that Obama is trying to distract attention from the poor economy with frequent ads and speeches about Bain and the Republican’s personal finances.

