Taking a look at today's Presidential polls, it's hard to find any real concrete patterns. As a result, we'll rate today as keeping with the status quo.
The trackers showed no real discernible movement. Rasmussen moved a point towards Romney. PPP and IBD/TIPP moved a point to Obama. Gallup remained unchanged in crazyville, showing Romney still ahead 51-45, though Obama did lose a point in the race among registered voters. Overall, the RealClearPolitics average shows Obama ahead nationally by .1%. (I will note that RCP is quite selective in choosing which polls to include in their average. They don't include the PPP tracker or internet pollsters like Reuters/Ipsos).
State poll results were quite mixed. On the bad side, PPP showed Obama's lead in Ohio down to 49-48. Last week, the same firm showed Obama up 51-46. This trend is obviously disturbing. Some of it might be statistical noise, but it seems like many polls are confirming that while Obama maintains a slight lead in the Buckeye state, the lead is tenuous.
The good news for Obama today actually came from a place where many people have counted him out: the Sunshine State. A Grove Insight poll (a Democratic firm) showed Obama leading Romney by 3, while SurveyUSA showed Obama up 1. Romney has led in most Florida polls recently, but it's good to know that perhaps Obama is keeping it close.
All in all, the story today remains the same: the race is awfully close, both nationally and in swing states, though Obama has a slight advantage.