After a summer of healthcare battles and sliding approval ratings for President Obama, the White House is facing a troubling new trend: The voters losing faith in the president are the ones he had worked hardest to attract.The rest of the article is here.
New surveys show steep declines in Obama's approval ratings among whites -- including Democrats and independents -- who were crucial elements of the diverse coalition that helped elect the country's first black president.
Among white Democrats, Obama’s job approval rating has dropped 11 points since his 100-days mark in April, according to surveys by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press. It has dropped by 9 points among white independents and whites over 50, and by 12 points among white women -- all groups that will be targeted by both parties in next year's midterm elections.
"While Obama has a lock on African Americans, his support among white voters seems to be almost in a free fall," said veteran Republican pollster Neil Newhouse.
Strategists in both parties blame Obama's decline on growing discontent with his policy agenda, particularly after a month of often-rowdy debate over his proposed healthcare overhaul, in which some conservatives accused him of socialism. Obama's ratings seem likely to rise again if he wins passage of healthcare legislation this fall.
But the drop in support among whites also comes as some conservatives have stoked controversies that have the potential to further erode Obama's standing among centrists -- including some controversies that resulted from White House stumbles.
The piece reviews most of the latest flops at the White House, starting with the Van Jones debacle. The larger lesson is the realization among the main core of the voting electorate that this presidency is not only off the tracks, but that the destination was to Looneyville in the first place.
President Obama's speeches have by now become deadening displays of serious sameness. What was once uplifting exhortations of soaring rhetorical promise are now routine but crass appeals for the public to save the Democrats' hard left agenda. Fewer and fewer people remain enthralled by the promising rhetoric and are now making straighforward interest-based calculations on whether to give the president the benefit of the doubt.
The key is not so much what happens this week, when Obama gives his address to the nation. What's important is that the administration learn from its mistakes so far. Why Obama thinks he'll sway opinion on the public option is unclear. It's not like the conservatives are going to all of a sudden abandon the tea parties and the coordinated media and grassroots campaign of political opposition. Obama needs some kind of effective policy of triangulation. The hardline radicals at the base of the Democratic Party can whine all they want, but they've got nowhere else to go. Perhaps a few primary challenges will go their way, but the record of these so far is unspectacular. They'll be back in the Obama camp in due time. That leaves the broad middle of the electorate that the administration is now losing, and the hard right that's now driving the debate.
Conservative activists have already held a funeral for ObamaCare. And last month the administration began shifting the debate to "insurance reform" (and not "universal coverage"). Perhaps some additional talking points on liberating markets might go a long way in restoring receptivity for the message. Giving up altogether would be a disaster for the Democrats, although Obama's new talk of entitlement reform could be a signal that he's ready to move on from the healtcare albatross.
Either way, conservatives have scored huge victories. We'll see in 2010 not just a midterm repudiation of the Democrats, but perhaps an electoral earthquake on the scale of 1994.
Cross-posted from American Power.
Cartoon Credit: William Warren at Americans for Limited Government.
Conservatives have had a part in this victory, but the real victory belongs to the people of all political stripe, ethnicity, et al, whether democrat, republican, liberal and conservative, who gathered together to challenge their own President and representatives on more than just government involvement in healthcare.
ReplyDeleteAnd it is not just whites, I can just hear those on the Left who lack the ability for real dialogue yelling "racism," who are growing in numbers who do not like where this government is headed. The American people deserve a hand for finally realizing that they need to stand up for they believe in.
Personally, I think that white people have moved past racism, we are not the racists anymore. But Obama & his friends certainly are.
ReplyDeleteObama will be rejected precisely because he is a racist. Between the Rev. Wright & now Van Jones, we see clearly who Obama really is.
I think it's becoming clear that Obama really doesn't like white people or people who have earned their possessions or people who take their religions seriously. He needs them politically but he can't hide his contempt for them and it's beginning to effect everything. Clinton learned from his mistakes but I don't think Obama will. He is what I once thought impossible, namely more arrogant than either of the Clintons.
ReplyDeleteThe very fact that the majority of the white vote has supported pro-minority legislation shows that whites have moved beyond racism.
ReplyDeleteThe fact that no matter how much is given it is never enough nor ever going to stop the racist lable proves the legislation was pushed by a racist minority.
Whites have finally woken up and said enough is enough.
Also I have seen many white women comment that the political wing of the feminist movement has left them behind. If they are finally seeing it for what it is this would support Obama's biggest drop in white female opinion. It was the white female vote that really carried Obama.
Shoprat,
ReplyDeleteEven though I did not care for Clinton as President, I believed he had the skill and capability to be a good President. What he lacked was the wherewithal. I do not believe that Obama has the skill, capability or wherewithal to be a president of any note, except maybe negative. He is carrying so much baggage from his associations that it may be impossible for him to be anything other than what he is now.
I agree with Anon that a large majority of whites have gotten past racism a number of years ago. That is not to say that it does not exist, but it is on the very fringes of that group and is condemned by large majorities.
Interesting, and Politico also has the text from his speech on their site as well.
ReplyDeleteFinally! People are waking up and seeing this guy for what he really is. A racist and eventually he will be exposed as a closet muslim just chomping at the bits waiting to come out. What part of inexperienced did these people not understand?
ReplyDeleteI happened to catch a few minutes of the POTUS's speech to his Labor Allies yesterday in Cincy. IMO, Obama was extremely agressive, angry and I expect he & his supporters are getting ready to take off the gloves even moreso than was seen @ the Townhalls. I have a feeling that we are watching the beginning of an armed conflict in this country!
ReplyDelete