Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

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BCTTWR

EOG Dedicated
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Funny ad has Dems escaping from Obama ala Jet Blue crazed attendant.

 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Waterloo: Obama?s approval at 42%, down eight points in three weeks

posted at 2:40 pm on September 24, 2010 by Allahpundit
<small> printer-friendly </small>


Gruesome. Wall to wall, probably the single worst poll for him that we?ve seen since he took office. Until the next poll, that is.
As Ace points out, this isn?t even among registered or likely voters, both of whom one would think are more politically attuned and therefore angrier right now than the general population. This is among adults.
The president?s approval rating now stands at 42 percent ? an all time low in CNN polling and 8 points lower than where Obama was only three weeks ago. Moreover, 56 percent of all Americans think the president has fallen short of their expectations?

In even worse news for congressional Democrats, likely voters say they are considerably more likely to vote for a candidate the president opposes than one he supports. On the other hand, 50 percent of voters said they would be more likely to vote for a Tea Party-backed candidate while a third of Americans said Tea Party support would dissuade their vote for a candidate. :houra
Fully/only 56 percent take the Jon Stewart line that Obama has fallen short of expectations, which helps explain why the GOP is out to a nine-point lead on the generic ballot taken in the same poll. And mind you, these numbers come on the same day that Baghdad Bob-ish House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is crowing that House Democrats are ?clamoring? for Obama to come to their districts to campaign for them.

Just one question: Is this an outlier or the start of a trend? Gallup?s had The One as far down as 41 percent last month, but recent polls have shown him up anywhere between 44 and 49. (The latest Rasmussen poll of likely voters has him at 47 percent.) It doesn?t matter all that much what the precise number is ? as long as it?s below 50 percent, he?s staring at an average loss of 36 House seats in the midterms ? but I wonder if the fact that it?s a poll of adults instead of voters is messing with the data. It could be that my assumption up above is wrong and that adults are actually less likely than registered/likely voters to support Obama because non-voters are reacting mainly to the horrible economy whereas voters include dedicated liberals who are motivated by ideology, specific policies, etc. If I?m right then his polling is probably a bit better than it looks here, albeit still gruesome.

Exit question: If it?s not an outlier, what explains the big downturn over the past three weeks? Tea-party fever? One too many Slurpee jokes? Nothing?s been going on policy-wise, really.
 

Kindred

EOG Member
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

I can't believe this clown got elected in the first place, about time America started to WAKE THE F UP
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Poll shows Obama re-elect number at 38%

posted at 8:48 am on September 27, 2010 by Ed Morrissey

<small>printer-friendly </small>


A new poll from Politico has bad news for the White House as Barack Obama prepares for the grueling task of re-election. Despite a long history of American voters choosing to re-elect its Chief Executive, Obama only gets 38% of likely voters to agree that he deserves re-election, while 44% say they will definitely vote against him ? and another 13% say they?re considering doing the same:
A significant majority of voters are considering voting against President Barack Obama in the 2012 election, expressing sour views of his new health care law and deep skepticism about his ability to create jobs and grow the sluggish economy, according to the latest POLITICO / George Washington University Battleground Poll.

Only 38 percent of respondents said Obama deserves to be reelected, even though a majority of voters hold a favorable view of him on a personal level. Forty-four percent said they will vote to oust him, and 13 percent said they will consider voting for someone else.
What?s the problem? ObamaCare and a lack of job creation have completely undermined Obama?s image as a moderate, pragmatic President:
It?s Obama?s policies that are hurting him right now. By a 13-point margin, voters are down on the health care law. In an especially troubling sign, more than half of self-identified independents ? 54 percent ? have an unfavorable opinion of the law, compared with just 38 percent who have a favorable opinion.

And by an 11-point margin, voters trust congressional Republicans to create jobs more than Obama. His approval rating stands at 46 percent, according to the poll of 1,000 likely voters, conducted Sept. 19 to Sept. 22.
Interestingly, Democrats do better without Obama on that question. They lead the GOP on the economy by two, and their standing improved since the last Politico/GWU poll last month by ten points. That hasn?t helped them much, though, as Republicans gained four points in the generic ballot in the same period. Having Obama go out aggressively on the stump may be damaging Democrats? chances of holding back the expected midterm Republican wave.

Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee polled best against Obama, but the season is far too early for a proper assessment of the GOP field. The lack of enthusiasm for Obama presents a big problem no matter who?s running, but one that should be kept in historical perspective. First, Obama still realistically has about fourteen months to turn things around, and Presidents have enough media draw for recovery, especially Obama.

Americans usually like to re-elect the man in the White House, too. In the last century, only a handful of sitting Presidents have lost their bid for re-election: George H. W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, and Herbert Hoover. (Gerald Ford was not elected in the first place, having become President through appointment as VP and then succession after Richard Nixon?s resignation.) All other Presidents who attempted re-election won a second term, and usually by handy amounts.

One thing these three examples of futility had in common, though, was bad economic environments. Hoover had made a Wall Street crash into a depression; Carter inherited the results of Keynesian tinkering by Nixon and Ford and transformed it into stagflation. Bush the Elder had reneged on his tax pledge and tipped the economy into a mild recession, from which we had already recovered by the election, but it was too late to keep Bill Clinton from winning, with a big help from Ross Perot in splitting the vote. This is why Obama realistically has about fourteen months to turn the economy around; if unemployment is still in the 8-9% level by December 2011, Democrats may wind up looking for some Hope and Change of their own to avoid a repeat of 2010 in 2012.
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

President Obama Job Approval

Polling Data

<table class="data"><tbody><tr><th class="noCenter">Poll</th><th class="date">Date</th><th>Sample</th><th>Approve </th><th>Disapprove </th><th class="spread">Spread</th></tr><tr class="rcpAvg"><td class="noCenter">RCP Average</td><td>9/14 - 9/25</td><td>--</td><td>44.7</td><td>51.1</td><td class="spread"> -6.4</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">Gallup</td><td>9/23 - 9/25</td><td>1547 A</td><td>44</td><td>49</td><td class="spread"> -5</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">Rasmussen Reports</td><td>9/23 - 9/25</td><td>1500 LV</td><td>47</td><td>52</td><td class="spread"> -5</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">CNN/Opinion Research</td><td>9/21 - 9/23</td><td>1010 A</td><td>42</td><td>54</td><td class="spread"> -12</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">Politico/GWU/Battleground</td><td>9/19 - 9/22</td><td>1000 LV</td><td>46</td><td>51</td><td class="spread"> -5</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">Reuters/Ipsos</td><td>9/16 - 9/19</td><td>1161 A</td><td>47</td><td>50</td><td class="spread"> -3</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">FOX News</td><td>9/14 - 9/16</td><td>900 RV</td><td>42</td><td>52</td><td class="spread"> -10</td></tr><tr><td class="noCenter">McClatchy/Marist</td><td>9/14 - 9/16</td><td>815 RV</td><td>45</td><td>50</td><td class="spread"> -5</td></tr></tbody></table>See All President Obama Job Approval Polling Data

<iframe src="http://charts.realclearpolitics.com/1044.epoll.html" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" width="100%" frameborder="0" height="547" scrolling="no"></iframe>
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voxbobby

EOG Veteran
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

We haven't gotten right to date - why would we start now???...lol
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

PPP: Obama crashing in blue states

posted at 2:55 pm on October 7, 2010 by Ed Morrissey <small> </small>

Barack Obama isn?t just having problems in red or purple states in this midterm cycle, as it happens. Public Policy Polling, usually seen as a Democratic-leaning pollster, says that even in states Obama won big in 2008, his numbers have sunk dramatically this year. In a dozen blue states that Obama won by nine points or more in his presidential election, his approval numbers are underwater in nine:
One of the most amazing things in our polling over the last month has been how dreadfully bad Barack Obama?s approval numbers are with likely voters in a lot of states that he won by large margins in 2008. We?ve polled 12 states since the beginning of September that Obama won by at least 9 points and in all but 3 of those states- Hawaii, California, and New York- his numbers are under water.

The states where we do now find Obama with negative numbers that he won easily in 2008- Michigan, Wisconsin, New Mexico, New Hampshire, Delaware, Maine, Connecticut, Colorado, and Illinois.

In the places where the bulk of likely voters disapprove of Obama it?s not very hard to see the contribution that?s making to tough Democratic prospects this fall. Democrats at this point are favored to lose Governorships in Michigan, Wisconsin, New Mexico, and Maine. Illinois and even New Hampshire are possible losses as well. The party is also favored to lose its Senate in Wisconsin, could lose them in Illinois and Colorado, looks like it will miss out on a once bright pick up opportunity in New Hampshire, and had to be bailed out by the Tea Party in Delaware.
Of course, we?re seeing that in Nevada as well, a state not mentioned by PPP, although they perhaps have not done a state-wide poll there yet that shows Obama underwater. Nevadans elected Barack Obama by almost 13 points but now have his approval rating at 48/51 in Rasmussen?s latest survey, a little better than his national average but still underwater. Nevada has two statewide races apparently affected by Obama?s popularity, at least in part ? the Senate race where Harry Reid has never gotten to the 50% number that usually indicates safety for an incumbent, and a gubernatorial race that Reid?s son Rory is losing so badly that Rory dropped the family name from his advertising.

None of these changes are exactly subtle, either. New Hampshire has the smallest change in the gap, going from a +9 in the 2008 election to a -8 in PPP?s poll. Kelly Ayotte has a good grasp on the Senate race there, and Carol Shea-Porter has a fight on her hands with Frank Guinta for her House seat. In Wisconsin, Obama?s diving nunbers have all but driven a stake through the heart of Russ Feingold?s re-election bid and threatens a sweep of other statewide races, including the open governor?s seat.

Obama won Wisconsin by 14 points in 2008 but now has a 41/54 approval rating for a swing of 27 points in just two years.

The bigger implications from this analysis, though, is for 2012 rather than 2010. If the economy does not improve over the next year, and hardly anyone predicts it will, then unemployment will go higher and dissatisfaction will rise even in these normally blue states. The Democratic Party may have to ask itself whether they can afford to have Barack Obama lead the party in the 2012 elections, or whether they need a change to restore confidence in their ability to govern. Otherwise, with the large number of incumbent Senators having to stand for re-election in that cycle, the tsunami that will engulf the House this cycle may return with greater force in 2012 and take almost everyone out of office.

Democrats cannot compete if Obama comes into that cycle with a -13 in Wisconsin, -5 in Illinois, and -12 in Michigan.
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Bloomberg poll shows 4 in 10 Obama supporters now opposing him

posted at 3:35 pm on October 12, 2010 by Ed Morrissey <small> </small>

Disillusionment has set into the one-time supporters of Hopenchange, according to a new Bloomberg poll of likely midterm voters. Nearly 40% of those who previously supported Barack Obama now disapprove of his job performance. The number grows among women and independents, where majorities of both have abandoned the President:
Hope has turned to doubt and disenchantment for almost half of President Barack Obama?s supporters.

More than 4 of 10 likely voters who say they once considered themselves Obama backers now are either less supportive or say they no longer support him at all, according to a Bloomberg National Poll conducted Oct. 7-10.

Three weeks before the Nov. 2 congressional elections that Republicans are trying to make a referendum on Obama, fewer than half of likely voters approve of the president?s job performance. Likely voters are more apt to say Obama?s policies have harmed rather than helped the economy. Among those who say they are most enthusiastic about voting this year, 6 of 10 say the Democrat has damaged the economy.
The worst news comes from two constituencies that lifted Obama and the Democrats to victory in 2008. Among likely-voter women who supported Obama in 2008, more than 60% have changed their minds, portending a very difficult battle in Obama?s re-election in 2012. Fifty-three percent of independents who voted for Obama now disapprove of his performance.

Interestingly, the perception of Obama as anti-business hasn?t resonated, with only 36% of likely voters professing that belief. There is a significant perception on the Left that Obama has been too pro-business, as Bloomberg reports from anecdotal comments. That doesn?t let Obama off the hook for the economy, though, as 47% believe that Obamanomics has damaged the economy, and 53% saying that Congressional Democrats have damaged the economy as well.

We?ll see how the damage to the Obama brand impacts Democrats in three weeks. With numbers deteriorating like this, and with economists predicting high unemployment and economic stagnation for the entirety of 2011, Obama seems destined to tread the same path as Jimmy Carter by the time Iowa holds its binding caucus in January 2012.
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Most Americans believe Obama should be a one-term president: poll

By CLEMENTE LISI

Last Updated: 1:34 PM, October 21, 2010
Posted: 1:07 PM, October 21, 201

A majority of Americans don't think President Obama deserves to keep his job, a poll released today shows.

With less than two weeks to go before the midterm elections, a survey conducted by Gallup shows that only 39 percent of Americans think Obama deserves to be re-elected in 2012.

A staggering 54 percent think he should be a one-term president, the poll found.


http://www.nypost.com/p/news/nation...ama_will_wnYTmuds5FiTX2MQiBh4hN#ixzz131Kiq5MH

:finger007-1
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Poll: Most Want Obama Fired In 2012

By Paul Bedard
Posted: October 27, 2010

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, rapped by the White House for pledging to make Barack Obama a one-term president, seems to have the support of a majority of Americans. A new poll provided to Whispers says that 56 percent of likely voters want the president fired.

According to pollster Doug Schoen, whose new poll shows vast support for the Tea Party movement among voters, the president is still liked by about half the nation. In fact, more like him personally than like his policies. Some 48 percent think he's a nice guy, while just 42 percent approve of his job performance.



:finger007-1
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

What can Obama possibly run on in 2012?He has not accomplished one single thing that anyone wants!!I thought Bush 1 was a do nothing shit president but Obama is putting him to shame.
 
Re: Obama's Approval Ratings TANKING!

Gallup: That electoral map for Obama in 2012 starting to look grim

posted at 1:25 pm on February 23, 2011 by Ed Morrissey

That’s not quite what Gallup explicitly says in its analysis, but it’s a rather inevitable conclusion when one sees the graphic presentation of the results. Barack Obama lost eleven points in his approval ratings on a state-by-state basis in 2010, and now the floor has Obama in danger of losing the next election. Bear in mind when looking at the legend that the “average” approval rating for Obama was 47% — and that Obama had a 50% or better rating only in the dark-green states:

Obama’s overall average approval rating in 2010 was 47%, down 11 percentage points from the 58% he recorded in his first calendar year in office. For purposes of this state-by-state analysis, Obama’s average is calculated for the calendar year, and is therefore slightly different than the yearly average calculated beginning with his inauguration on January 20, 2009.

Broadly speaking, residents of 20 states gave Obama an approval rating within three percentage points of his national average (between 43.8% and 49.8%). Twelve states plus the District of Columbia had average approval ratings above that range, and in 18 states, approval fell below it.
The graphic is striking. Obama only gets majority approval for his performance on the West Coast and the Northeast — and not even all of those areas. He holds his home state of Illinois and his birth state of Hawaii, both unsurprisingly, but between the coasts there exists a vast land of either indifference or outright disapproval. Traditional Democratic states like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania are wavering. The entire interior West has become outright hostile. More than half of the states have shown a double-digit decline in approval for Obama.

Presidents can win re-election with overall approval ratings below 50%, but that usually requires either a credible third-party challenge or an extraordinarily poor challenger. The economy would have to significantly improve to move these numbers in the direction where Obama can feel safe, and that seems unlikely to happen while Obama continues to press for regulatory adventurism.

Obama has a year at best to turn this around. He won the 2008 election at the peak of Bush fatigue by seven points nationwide. Continuing erosion in his standing puts the White House within the grasp of the GOP, especially if they nominate a credible candidate who can attract a “big tent” of those discontented with Obama.
 
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