Obama pollster: People didn’t trust Mitt

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The first time I got Joel Benenson on the phone Tuesday night, we got interrupted a little. Joel is Barack Obama’s chief pollster, and it was 10:12 p.m. Chicago time.

I know that, because that’s when the screaming began.

“I have time to talk,” Joel had been saying into the phone. And then there was this shrieking and shouting and roaring in the background that can only come from people who thought they were too tired to shout that loud but found out they weren’t.

“They just called it for us!” Joel yelled into the phone. “We’re over the top! I’ll call you back!”

I looked at the TV. NBC had just projected Obama with enough electoral votes to win re-election to the presidency.

Not that Joel had been worried. (I call him Joel and not Benenson because that would be too weird. I have known Joel and his brother for decades now and consider them both friends.)

Joel’s polling had not shown the spikes and valleys that the media narrative had said existed. There were good moments — the Democratic convention and Mitt Romney’s remarks about how 47 percent of Americans thought they were victims who were entitled to such luxury items as food, housing and health care — but there were also bad moments like the first presidential debate.

“But it wasn’t volatile no matter what the (public) polls and chatter said,” Joel said when I reached him backstage at McCormick Place before Obama made his victory speech. “The old model that says the undecideds will break for the challenger is no longer true. We knew we would get our share.”

And Obama did not have swings of mood. He didn’t need to, but he probably wouldn’t have had them anyway. It was the same “no drama” Obama, the same guy who maintained his composure no matter what.

“That’s the guy I know,” Joel said. “He stays focused on the mission. I never saw him any other way. We had a lead, we had an edge, and we never relinquished it.”

Obama’s polling showed him with an aggregate 3-4 percentage point lead in the battleground states, and so election night contained excitement, but not a lot of mystery for Team Obama.

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