An increasing number of polls show President Obama widening his lead over Mitt Romney, both nationally and in swing states. But Paul Ryan is maintaining that Americans should take those surveys with a big grain of salt.
“The polls are close,” Ryan insisted to Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday.
Wallace pushed back, saying, “But you are trailing.” Ryan replied that he and Romney are “running against an incumbent president” with “incredible resources.”
Ryan said he didn’t think the presidential debate on Wednesday would drastically alter the state of the race. Like many other partisans on both sides of the contest, he attempted to lower expectations for his team, saying that Obama “is a very gifted speaker.”
“The man has been on the national stage for many years,” he said, whereas the first debate will be “Mitt’s first time on this kind of stage.”
Wallace noted, however, that Romney has had to participate in approximately two dozen debates to make it this far in the race.
As for the floundering Romney campaign itself: Ryan admitted that his ticket has made some “missteps” over the past few weeks, but said he was confident they would win come Election Day.
“We’ve had some missteps. But at the end of the day, the choice is really clear. We have pro-growth solutions … you’ve got the president basically offering four more years like the last four, of stagnation and dependency,” Ryan said. “Here and there, we have not been able to frame that choice as clearly.”









