[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
The Water Cooler Title: New Polls Spell Gloom For Obama's Democrats New opinion polls Tuesday made painful reading for President Barack Obama's Democrats, cementing conventional wisdom that they face a pounding by Republicans in November's congressional elections. The surveys, published after the Labor Day weekend, the traditional campaign kick-off date, suggest voters have soured on Obama, see him as too liberal and are increasingly pessimistic about the sluggish economic recovery. At a time of high unemployment and economic pain, it appears that the cocktail of hope and change that powered Obama to the presidency has drained away and that a short era of Democratic political dominance may be closing. Yet, the polls also suggest that despite their anger at incumbent Democrats, the public has little genuine affection for Republicans, opening possible lines of attack for the White House as it seeks to limit the damage. A Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll shows Republicans have a yawning 49 percent to 40 percent advantage among likely voters, which would probably be enough for them to grab back control of the House of Representatives. All 435 House seats are up for grabs along with 37 of the 100 Senate seats in the November 2 election. Several key analysts believe Republicans are in reach of winning the 39 seats they need to capture the House but are less likely to snatch the Senate. Should Republicans win or capture both chambers, they could spell the end of Obama's sweeping reform agenda and usher in a period of tense divided government. The Journal survey also reveals the depth of the economic pessimism soaking the electorate -- with only 26 percent of those surveyed believing that the economy will be better in the next year, down 47 percent from a year ago. Democrats had hoped the economy would be showing robust signs of recovery by now that would translate to quicker jobs growth felt by voters: these figures suggest promises of better days ahead may not work. Obama argues that his policies headed off a far deeper disaster and warns Republicans would revive policies that sparked the crisis and consign America to perpetual economic purgatory. "We have tried what they?re peddling -- we did it for 10 years, we ended up with the worst economy since the 1930s and record deficits to boot," Obama told a rally of union workers in Wisconsin on Monday. "It?s not like we haven?t tried what they?re trying to sell us." But memories of the previous Bush administration are fading, and it appears voters may just simply pile blame on Democrats, who own a monopoly on power in Washington. A Gallup national poll last week showed Republicans had an unprecedented 10-point edge among registered voters nationwide, their widest advantage in the organization's six-decade history of mid-term surveys. And Obama's own diminished approval ratings may limit the impact he has in energizing core voters and winning back crucial independents. The Journal survey found Obama's job approval at 45 percent, while a Washington Post poll Tuesday pegged it at 46 percent. Any ratings of below 50 percent have historically spelled bad news for a first-term president in mid-term polls. Again, it appears that economic agony is to blame. The Post poll found that 57 percent of Americans now disapprove of Obama's management of the economy. The Post survey also suggests that Obama has lost his ability to ride the prevailing political sentiment that underpinned his 2008 election campaign. Some 45 percent in the Post/ABC survey said Obama was "too liberal" -- a new high, a factor likely depressing his standing among independent voters who can sway close elections -- 57 percent of whom now disapprove of him. Though Democrats are unpopular, Republicans cannot boast of any groundswell of public affection either. The Journal survey shows that Democrats are viewed positively by 36 percent of those surveyed -- actually higher than the 30 percent who had a favorable view of Republicans. In the Post poll, only 31 percent of those asked had a positive view of Republicans -- an impression the president is trying to deepen. The Journal surveyed 1,000 voters late last month and has a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points. The Post surveyed 1,002 adults with a plus or minus error of 3.5 points. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest the public has little genuine affection for Republicans, opening possible lines of attack for the White House as it seeks to limit the damage. Hey moonbats, I have an October surprise for you: Maybe Junior Bush will do something to place him in the news (a news item real or imagined will do just fine.) Bushes are always ready to help and to be bi-partisan, you know. It's in their DNA The re-emergence of Bush will fire up the base. The moonbat Left base, that is. ______________________________________________________________________________ Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|