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Tea party supporters split 33 percent for Cain to 29 percent for Romney and 13 percent for Perry. Gene O'Dor, a retired postal worker from Mobile, Ala., said he likes Romney's somewhat centrist leanings. "I think he is a moderate, like I am," said O'Dor, 66. "I feel he has the background in business to get this country back to where it needs to be." "I don't think he is going to be a person that lies to the American public," O'Dor said. Benjamin Matzke, a video editor from Nicollet, Minn., is among those Republicans whom Romney has yet to persuade. "He really to me looks a lot like a career politician," said Matske, 27. He said Romney "seems to pay lip service to a lot of things that I feel are important," including abortion, but "his stance on health care is a little soft." There seems to be a broad gender divide in the Republican contest. Among GOP women, Romney is favored over his nearest competitor, Cain, by 17 percentage points, with the rest of the field in single digits. The picture is more muddled among Republican men: 31 percent favor Cain, 26 percent Romney, 17 percent Perry and 10 percent Paul. The rest are each 5 percent or below. Among all adults, regardless of party identification, 21 percent say they'd like the GOP to nominate Romney. Eighteen percent name Cain, 13 percent Perry and 11 percent Paul. The poll found shifts in candidates' favorability ratings. These numbers don't necessarily track people's likelihood to vote for or against someone, but they offer insight into how candidates are being received as they become better known. Romney, Cain and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich have gotten positive bumps since August. Romney and Cain are the only GOP contenders viewed favorably by more than 40 percent of all adults. Romney's favorable rating has risen 10 points among all adults since August and now stands at 49 percent. Increases came across party lines but especially among conservative Republicans. Cain's favorability rating among Republicans has nearly doubled as he has spent more time in the spotlight, increasing from 37 percent favorable in August to 71 percent favorable now. Just 10 percent of Republicans hold a negative impression of him. Party insiders will watch for signs that Tuesday's hard-hitting debate might have wounded Cain a bit. Obama's favorability ratings are essentially unchanged since August, with 54 percent of adults holding a favorable view of him and 44 percent unfavorable. The Associated Press-GfK poll was conducted Oct. 13-17, by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,000 adults nationwide and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. The poll included interviews with 431 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents; the margin of error for these results was plus or minus 6.1 percentage points. ___ Online: Poll details: http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com/
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