Rasmussen
What
They Told Us: Reviewing Last
Week’s Key Polls
Saturday, December 08, 2012
41%
Say U.S. Heading in Right
Direction
Generic Congressional Ballot:
Democrats 47%, Republicans 36%
Consumer Confidence Falls Two
Points on Saturday
The
GOP is losing the messaging war
in the ongoing debate over how to avoid the so-called “fiscal cliff.”
Voters
are more confident that the president is willing to agree to a deal
with both
spending cuts and tax increases than Republicans are.
Just
40% think Obama will insist on
tax increases only, while 51% feel the GOP will insist on spending cuts
only.
Most unaffiliated voters are skeptical that either side is really
willing to
accept a deal.
The
president “is winning … largely
because Republicans aren't even in the game," Scott Rasmussen explains
in
his weekly newspaper column. "The president has proposed a policy that
addresses a perceived level of unfairness in the nation's economic
arrangements. Whether it's the best approach doesn't even matter
because
Republicans in Washington haven't even tried to address the fairness
issue.
They keep arguing about economic theories."
On
Scott Rasmussen’s weekly TV
show, What America Thinks, noted economist Larry Kudlow says the term
“fiscal
cliff” is overheated. He prefers to call it a fiscal slope. The noted
economist
also says that the attitude in Washington towards entrepreneurs is more
damaging to the economy than slightly higher tax rates.
Most
voters continue to support the
president’s call for higher taxes on upper-income Americans. However,
just 19%
agree with Obama’s call for increased federal spending to help
stimulate the
economy.
While
hoping for a deal to avoid
the tax hikes and spending cuts slated for January 1, voters aren’t
confident that
a deal will be any better. In fact, most voters think any deal reached
by the
president and Congress will raise taxes for the middle class. Few
believe
spending cuts will materialize.
Recognition
is growing among voters
that reducing the deficit will require cuts in both defense and
entitlement
programs like Social Security and Medicare. However, in recent weeks,
voters
have grown less confident that the politicians will adopt a long-term
plan to
accomplish that goal.
Fifty-four
percent (54%) of voters
put economic growth ahead of economic fairness. But there is a clear
perception
that higher-income Americans are not paying their fair share of the tax
burden.
Most
voters (52%) now consider the
president a good or excellent leader, the first time his positives have
broken
the 50% mark since June 2009. He continues to earn some of the highest
job
approval ratings of his presidency in the daily Presidential Tracking
Poll.
Meanwhile,
just 10% of voters rate
Congress’ job performance as good or excellent.
Democrats
have jumped to an
11-point lead over Republicans on the Generic Congressional Ballot, the
largest
lead they have held since late August 2008. The GOP is at its lowest
level of
support since January 2009. Up until about a month before Election Day,
Republicans had generally held a modest lead on the Generic Ballot
since June
2009.
For
the third week in a row, 41% of
Likely U.S. Voters say the country is heading in the right direction.
That’s up
24 points from a year ago and near the highest level of optimism during
the
Obama presidency.
Thirty-three
percent (33%) of
consumers say the U.S. economy is getting better these days, but 43%
say it's
getting worse. Among investors, 34% think economic conditions in the
country
are improving, but 44% disagree.
Forty-three
percent (43%) of
Americans believe unemployment will be higher in a year's time. That’s
the
highest level of pessimism measured in several years.
The
Rasmussen Employment Index
which measures worker confidence fell a point in November. It’s down
two points
since January but is up two points from this time last year. Twenty
percent
(20%) of workers report their firms are hiring, while 25% report their
employer
is laying people off. This is the fifth straight month that reported
layoffs have
outnumbered reported hiring. Prior to that, there had been eight
straight
months with more hiring than layoffs.
More
Americans than ever (39%) now
think that if people can’t find work for an extended period of time,
the
government should do nothing at all to help them. Only eight percent
(8%) feel
their unemployment benefits should be extended indefinitely.
Also
potentially troubling for the
president are the continued legal challenges against his national
health care
law. As part of that law, all companies must have health insurance
coverage
that provides no-cost contraceptives for women, but a federal appeals
court has
upheld a challenge by a Catholic businessman who says the law violates
his
religious beliefs. Forty-six percent (46%) of voters feel that if
providing
such coverage violates the deeply held beliefs of a church, religious
organization or business owner, they should be allowed to opt out of
providing
coverage for contraceptives. But nearly as many voters (41%) disagree.
Voters
tend to agree with the
federal government setting standards for health insurance coverage but
think
individuals should have the right to choose reduced coverage if it
saves them
money…
Read
the rest of the article at
Rasmussen
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