Estimating Googles & each campaigns Web site traffic
Texas Insider Report: WASHINGTON D.C. Barack Obama spends between $4400-$13100 daily on Google search ads compared with Mitt Romneys $3400-$6300 estimates Larry Kim founder of WordStream.
Romney racked up 28579 YouTube subscribers versus Obamas 257471. Kim predicts Barack Obama will win the vote for U.S. president
by a landslide.
He also estimates that Obama remains much stronger than Romney when it comes to all aspects of social media from Facebook to YouTube to Twitter.
- Estimated Web site visitors for Romney? 2.6 million versus Obama with 8.6 million.
- Twitter followers were 1.6 million for Romney versus 21.7 million for the president.
WordStreams founder
Larry Kim predicts that Barack Obama will win the vote for U.S. president by a landslide basing his prediction on the amount that Obama and Mitt Romney spent for political campaign ads on Googles Display Networks each campaigns Web site traffic and social media presence on

Facebook Twitter and YouTube.
While there are factors other than how much time and money went into online campaigns -- along with Fans and Followers -- that determine whether Obama or Romney will become the next U.S. president search experts cannot deny the numbers supporting intent not to mention correlating the relationship and similarities on how advertisers connect the perfect ad with the keyword or click.
A week ago each candidate drew support from 47 of the likely electorate. Many positive signs point to Obama
according to the Pew research.
For example 39 of the likely voters support Obama strongly while 9 back him only moderately. A third of likely voters support Romney strongly compared with 11 who back him moderately.
Kims and Pews research are not the only factors.
Nate Silver
The Wall Street Journal statistician describes how its increasingly difficult to find Romney leading in national surveys although several suggest a tie with Obama. Overall Obama remains the

favorite in Sundays national polls from Google Consumer Surveys to
Washington Post and ABC News.
Silver
suggests that Hurricane Sandy blew Romney off course and allowed Obama to gain a stronger footing. As of Oct. 28 the
WSJ counts Obama owning 307.2 of the electoral votes versus 230.8 for Romney.
The numbers say Obama has an 86.3 chance of winning the U.S. presidential election versus 13.7 for Romney.
The popular vote comes a little closer with 50.6 and 48.5 respectively.