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Obama's Poll Numbers Are Falling to
Earth By DOUGLAS E. SCHOEN and SCOTT
RASMUSSEN It is simply wrong for
commentators to continue to focus on President Barack
Obama's high levels of popularity, and to conclude that
these are indicative of high levels of public confidence
in the work of his administration. Indeed, a detailed
look at recent survey data shows that the opposite is
most likely true. The American people are coming to
express increasingly significant doubts about his
initiatives, and most likely support a different agenda
and different policies from those that the Obama
administration has advanced.
Polling data show that Mr. Obama's approval rating is
dropping and is below where George W. Bush was in an
analogous period in 2001. Rasmussen Reports data shows
that Mr. Obama's net presidential approval rating --
which is calculated by subtracting the number who
strongly disapprove from the number who strongly approve
-- is just six, his lowest rating to date.
Overall, Rasmussen Reports shows a 56%-43% approval, with
a third strongly disapproving of the president's
performance. This is a substantial degree of polarization
so early in the administration. Mr. Obama has lost
virtually all of his Republican support and a good part
of his Independent support, and the trend is decidedly
negative.
A detailed examination of presidential popularity after
50 days on the job similarly demonstrates a substantial
drop in presidential approval relative to other elected
presidents in the 20th and 21st centuries. The reason for
this decline most likely has to do with doubts about the
administration's policies and their impact on peoples'
lives.
There is also a clear sense in the polling that taxes
will increase for all Americans because of the stimulus,
notwithstanding what the president has said about taxes
going down for 95% of Americans. Close to three-quarters
expect that government spending will grow under this
administration.
Recent Gallup data echo these concerns. That polling
shows that there are deep-seated, underlying economic
concerns. Eighty-three percent say they are worried that
the steps Mr. Obama is taking to fix the economy may not
work and the economy will get worse. Eighty-two percent
say they are worried about the amount of money being
added to the deficit. Seventy-eight percent are worried
about inflation growing, and 69% say they are worried
about the increasing role of the government in the U.S.
economy.
When Gallup asked whether we should be spending more or
less in the economic stimulus, by close to 3-to-1 margin
voters said it is better to have spent less than to have
spent more. When asked whether we are adding too much to
the deficit or spending too little to improve the
economy, by close to a 3-to-2 margin voters said that we
are adding too much to the deficit.
Support for the stimulus package is dropping from narrow
majority support to below that. There is no sense that
the stimulus package itself will work quickly, and
according to a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, close
to 60% said it would make only a marginal difference in
the next two to four years. Rasmussen data shows that
people now actually oppose Mr. Obama's budget, 46% to
41%. Three-quarters take this position because it will
lead to too much spending. And by 2-to-1, voters reject
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's call for a second stimulus
package.
While over two-thirds support the plan to help homeowners
refinance their mortgage, a 48%-36% plurality said that
it will unfairly benefit those who have been
irresponsible, echoing Rick Santelli's call to arms on
CNBC.
And although a narrow majority remains confident in Mr.
Obama's goals and overall direction, 45% say they do not
have confidence, a number that has been growing since the
inauguration less than two months ago. With
three-quarters saying that they expect the economy to get
worse, it is hard to see these numbers improving
substantially.
There is no real appetite for increasing taxes to pay for
an expanded health-insurance program. Less than half
would support such an idea, which is 17% less than the
percentage that supported government health insurance
when Bill Clinton first considered it in March of 1993.
While voters blame Republicans for the lack of
bipartisanship in Washington, the fact is that they do
not believe Mr. Obama has made any progress in improving
the impulse towards cooperation between the two parties.
Further, nearly half of voters say that politics in
Washington will be more partisan over the next year.
Fifty-six percent of Americans oppose giving bankers any
additional government money or any guarantees backed by
the government. Two-thirds say Wall Street will benefit
more than the average taxpayer from the new bank bailout
plan. This represents a jump in opposition to the first
plan passed last October. At that time, 45% opposed the
bailout and 30% supported it. Now a solid majority
opposes the bank bailout, and 20% think it was a good
idea. A majority believes that Mr. Obama will not be able
to cut the deficit in half by the end of his term.
Only less than a quarter of Americans believe that the
federal government truly reflects the will of the people.
Almost half disagree with the idea that no one can earn a
living or live "an American life" without protection and
empowerment by the government, while only one-third
agree.
Despite the economic stimulus that Congress just passed
and the budget and financial and mortgage bailouts that
Congress is now debating, just 19% of voters believe that
Congress has passed any significant legislation to
improve their lives. While Congress's approval has
increased, it still stands at only 18%. Over two-thirds
of voters believe members of Congress are more interested
in helping their own careers than in helping the American
people. When it comes to the nation's economic issues,
two-thirds of voters have more confidence in their own
judgment than they do in the average member of Congress.
Finally, what probably accounts for a good measure of the
confidence and support the Obama administration has
enjoyed is the fact that they are not Republicans.
Virtually all Americans, more than eight in 10, blame
Republicans for the current economic woes, and the only
two leaders with lower approval ratings than Harry Reid
and Nancy Pelosi are Republican leaders Mitch McConnell
and John Boehner.
All of this is not just a subject for pollsters and
analysts to debate. It shows fundamentally that public
confidence in government remains low and is slipping. We
face the possibility of substantial gridlock along with
an absolute absence of public confidence that could come
to mirror the lack of confidence in the American economy
that the Dow and the S&P are currently showing.
Mr. Schoen, formerly a pollster for President Bill
Clinton, is the author of "Declaring Independence: The
Beginning of the End of the Two Party System" (Random
House, 2008). Mr. Rasmussen is president of Rasmussen
Reports, an independent national polling company
Original at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123690358175013837.html
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