US President Barack Obama is nearly tied with his presumptive Republican rival Mitt Romney in 12 battleground States, a latest opinion poll has said.
The poll after Romney became the presumptive Republican nominee was carried out by USA Today and Gallup according to which the two leaders are nearly tied -- 45 per cent vs 47 per cent respectively - among registered voters in the 12 battleground states.
Romney is better positioned today than he was in March, when USA Today/Gallup found Obama leading by nine percentage points among swing-state voters.
Romney now roughly matches his standing earlier in the year, before he secured the Republican nomination.
Interviews were conducted among registered voters in 12 states where the presidential race is expected to be closely contested: Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Wisconsin.
While Obama edges out Romney by two points in the overall preferences of swing-state registered voters, he has a four-point advantage with respect to solid supporters: 36 per cent of swing-state voters say they are certain they will vote for Obama in November, while 32 per cent are certain they will vote for Romney.
Each candidate's remaining supporters -- the 11 per cent who favour Obama and the 13 per cent favouring Romney -- say there is a chance they could change their mind between now and the election.
An additional seven per cent of voters are undecided, meaning a total of 31 per cent of swing-state voters are not firmly committed at this time.
According to the poll, Obama's swing-state prospects also look a bit brighter than Romney's on the basis of voter enthusiasm. More than half of Obama's supporters, 55 per cent, are extremely or very enthusiastic about voting in this year's presidential election, up from 49 per cent saying this in March.
By contrast, 46 per cent of Romney's supporters are extremely or very enthusiastic, unchanged from 47 per cent in March. Today's figures reflect a reversal from January, when 55 per cent of Romney voters were extremely or very enthusiastic, compared with 50 per cent of Obama voters, the poll said.