How low is low – Obama numbers

by YankeeJim | November 16, 2011 at 07:57 am
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President Obama, the missing mandate

President Obama, the missing mandate

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Inspired by this article, I wrote another story about the necessity for a mandate from We the People to guide what we want from Presidents. Presidents and Congress cannot operate without knowing what we want.

When we give President Low marks it is feedback that we don’t like the performance and may not like the agenda. It isn’t clear from polls alone what we want and where there is an apparent disconnect.


CNN Poll: Obama ranks low among recent incumbents

Posted by CNN Political Unit

Washington (CNN) - President Barack Obama's overall approval rating remains in the mid-40s, where it has been since July, and he continues to receive much higher marks for foreign policy than for domestic issues, according to a new national survey out one year before he is up for re-election.

A CNN/ORC International Poll released Tuesday indicates that 52% of all Americans approve of how the president is handling the situation in Iraq, an indication that Americans tend to favor Obama's decision to withdraw all U.S. troops from that country by year's end. Forty-eight percent of those questioned approve of how he is handling the war in Afghanistan. By contrast, only 35% have a positive view of his economic track record, and just 38% approve of how he is handling health care policy.

Full results (pdf)

It all adds up to an overall 46% approval rating for the president, with 52% saying they disapprove of how Obama is handling his job in the White House.

"That's par for the course for Obama, whose overall approval rating has been hovering in the mid 40s in every CNN poll conducted since June," CNN Polling Director Keating Holland said.

In comparison to recent incumbents running for re-election, Obama's 46% approval ranks above only Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford - who both lost their re-election bids - in November of the year before an election. Most incumbents who were re-elected had an approval rating above 50% a year before the election. But George W. Bush, at 50%, and Richard Nixon, at 49%, also won re-election, and Bush's father George H.W. Bush had a 56% approval rating yet lost to Bill Clinton the following year.

"Translation: while the approval rating is an important indicator of a president's strength, it is not a foolproof predictor of election results," Holland said.

See how Obama's number stack up.

The poll indicates that the standard partisan divide over the president remains, with three-quarters of Democrats giving Obama a thumbs up but only 15% of Republicans approving of the job he's doing in office. By a 54%-42% margin, independent voters disapprove of how the president's handling his duties.

Women are divided on how Obama's performing, but men disapprove by a 55%-43% margin. White Americans give Obama a thumbs down by a 61%-36% margin, with non-white Americans give the president a thumbs up by a more than 2-1 margin.

The CNN poll was conducted by ORC International from November 11-13, with 1,036 adult Americans questioned by telephone. The survey's overall sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points.

– CNN Deputy Political Director Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.


Read my story: The missing mandate: http://politisite.com/2011/11/16/the-missing-mandate/

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Grace H

Think of it this way though:

The President is elected in a partisan manner. Give or take he'll have the backing or approval of maybe sixty percent of the country—and that's a very generous estimate. So if his approval ratings remain in the mid-forties and are higher on some issues he still has the support of the majority of the people who supported him in the first place. Most others could not be expected to support him. They have sort of abdicated their capacity for reason.

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