Friday, June 12, 2009

Obama's Poll Numbers Are Falling

Obama's issues crumbling
Contributed by Dick Morris
06/09/09 04:51 PM [ET]
At last, there is convincing evidence that Obama's poll numbers may be descending to earth. While his approval remains high and his personal favorability is even higher the underlying numbers suggest that a decline may be in the offing. Even as he stands on his pedestal, the numbers under his feet are crumbling. According to a Rasmussen poll, more voters now trust Republicans more than Democrats to handle the economy, by a margin of 45-39. Scott Rasmussen notes that this is the first time in over two years of polling that the GOP has held the
advantage on this issue. Last month, he had the Democrats holding a one-point lead, but they lost it in June's polling. And the Democratic leads over Republicans on their core issues are also dropping. Particularly interesting is the Democratic decline over healthcare, from an 18-point lead in May to only 10 points now.
A Gallup poll also confirms that the president's personal ratings are high, but the underlying data less so. While 67 percent of voters give Obama personal favorable ratings and 61 percent approve of his job performance (Rasmussen has his job approval lower, at 55 percent), they give him much lower ratings on specific issues.
Gallup shows Obama getting only 55 percent approval on his handling of the economy (down from 59 percent in February) and finds that only 45 percent approve of his handling of federal spending while 46 percent approve of his treatment of the budget deficit.
As it becomes clearer that the deficit caused by spending has landed us in a new economic crisis, entirely of Obama's own making, his popularity and job performance are likely to drop as well.
The old recession that the public says was caused by Bush shows signs of winding down. But the new recession and/or inflation triggered by Obama's massive deficits is just now coming upon us.
If Obama refuses to cut back on his spending/stimulus plans (despite convincing evidence that Americans are not spending the money), he has three options:
a) He can raise taxes, which will trigger a deeper recession;
b) He can print money, which will trigger huge inflation;
c) He can pay more interest to borrow money, which will send the economy diving down again.
The blame for these outcomes will fall squarely on Obama's deficit and spending policies. The fact that Americans are aware of these issues, and already disapprove of Obama's performance on them, indicates that they will be increasingly receptive to blaming him for the recession.
Interestingly, Obama's polling is now the exact opposite of President Clinton's in the days after Monica Lewinsky. Back then, the president's approval for handling specific issues was his forte, while his job approval remained high but his personal favorability lagged 20 points behind. Ultimately, it is a politician's performance on specific issues that determines
his electability. Personal favorability withers in the face of issue differences. Obama is about to find out that you cannot rely on image to bolster your presidency when the underlying issues are crumbling.
All this data suggests that Obama might run out of steam just as he gets to his healthcare agenda. As unemployment mounts, month after month, and Obama's claims of job creation (or savings) ring hollow, it is possible that he will not have the heft to pass his radical restructuring of the healthcare system. The automaton Democratic majority may pass it anyway, but it will be a one-way ticket to oblivion if they do.
dickmorris.com.

2 comments:

Karen said...

"Obama is about to find out that you cannot rely on image to bolster your presidency when the underlying issues are crumbling."

Especially when the crumbling issues demand a different kind of image. I think America, even I dare say the youth of America, is hungry for a new kind of image. Frivolity is on its way out. The "whatever" generation is waking up to damage done by absentminded indecisive living. They are waking up to the actual price tag behind the lifestyles marketed to them in sitcoms (or I guess you could say the actual debt tag), and to the ultimate emptiness in it. In Henry V fashion, they are also waking up to the cherished responsibility of maintaining their national inheritance and to the possibility of rising to this challenge. This generation is hungry for a name and for a heritage that goes beyond 'X,' and the present trials offer that chance.

Integrity, humility, honesty, gratitude, sincerity, perseverance (long suffering), confession (recognizing what's wrong), repentance (fixing what's wrong), Confident Identity (not bowing to be defined by the enemy, or taking on false guilt), courage.... these are the qualities that would best counsel the new image America is seeking.

Anything you would add to the list?

Anonymous said...

Karen, how about adding trust, loyalty, fairness,patriotism,moral virtues,and supporting liberty by upholding the Constitution of the United States?!

The Foundry