I feel the exact opposite. Obama is a disaster and the fact that Romney isn't up by huge numbers is the biggest problem with our country. We're going to have to go broke before we can make the changes we need to make it seems.
If Obama does in fact when, that's going to be why. The whole Republican argument for years (at least it seems like years) has been that Obama has been a horrible disaster as President, taking a once prosperous country into an economic free fall that we will be lucky if we recover from.
And it's an effective campaign strategy, if you can prove it. The problem is that Republicans HAVEN'T done a good job proving it. Laying all our recent economic problems at Obama's feet is something that's incredibly hard to sell (because people remember when this all started and why). And saying he's made it worse hasn't really worked either. Attacking the slow recovery might have been effective if people weren't slowly gaining confidence in the economy again and if Republicans didn't spend at least half the time arguing we're not recovering at all.
To be honest though, I think the real issue is the national debt and spending argument. When you're having trouble finding a job and can't get health care, arguments about long-term national debt sound like a bunch of accounting bullshit you couldn't care less about. And I agree that we should work on getting our national debt under a bit more control, but grinding the government to a halt to do so or making it our only priority doesn't seem like a tremendously smart idea to me when the economy is still shaky. Attacking the national debt with 400% enthusiasm will do absolutely nothing for our economy in the short term and beating the national debt drums hasn't helped the Republicans at all with people worried about the economy NOW.
Romney may win tomorrow, you never know. But if he does lose, blame it on overreach. Making the argument that things are worse than ever and Obama is destroying our country is a pretty big claim, and one that I don't think Republicans sufficiently backed up. Going for less would have been a better strategy, in my not at all expert opinion. The Tea Party did (sort of) good in 2010, I don't think they're a long term winner for the Republicans.
I'm way too liberal to even consider voting Republican (with a few exceptions). But I have friends who lean Republican on economic issues who are voting Obama because of the ridiculous way Republicans have approached economic issues this election...and because of their social issue position that they can't quite escape.
