(Reuters) – Republican Mitt Romney received no immediate boost to his White House bid by naming U.S. Representative Paul Ryan as vice presidential running mate, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday.
Some 51 percent of those surveyed said the decision did not change their opinion of Romney, a former private-equity executive and Massachusetts governor who will face President Barack Obama in the November 6 election.
Another 26 percent in the online poll said they viewed Romney more favorably after he added the 42-year-old Wisconsin congressman to the ticket on Saturday, while 23 percent said they viewed him less favorably.
The survey of 508 registered voters was conducted for Reuters from August 11 to August 13.
Ryan is a polarizing figure in Washington, where he has led his party’s push to cut domestic spending, lower taxes and scale back the size of the federal government as chairman of the House of Representatives Budget Committee.
But he remains largely unknown to the wider public.
While 80 percent of those surveyed said they had at least heard of Ryan, only 35 percent said they were familiar with him.
Some 42 percent said they did not know whether he was qualified or not to be president – a higher percentage than the 33 percent who said he was not qualified and the 26 percent who said he was.
One warning sign for the Romney campaign: by a margin of 44 percent to 29 percent, voters said the incumbent vice president, Joe Biden, was more qualified than Ryan to serve as president if the need arose.
“He’s fairly unknown in who he is and what he stands for,” said Ipsos vice president Julia Clark. “He’s a Wisconsin congressman, not a nationally known figure.”
That is likely to change in the coming weeks as Ryan campaigns across the country to build enthusiasm among grass-roots conservatives while Democrats attack his budget plan as one that would gut programs for the elderly and the poor.
The precision of the Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 5.1 percentage points for all respondents.
(Reporting By Andy Sullivan, Editing by Alistair Bell)