Rasmussen…
What
They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key
Polls
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Generic
Congressional Ballot: Republicans 44%,
Democrats 43%
Senate
Balance of Power: Dems 48 GOP 45
Toss-Ups 7
52%
of Consumers and Investors Think Economy is
Getting Worse
The
presidential race remains competitive even
though voters still trust Mitt Romney slightly more than President
Obama when
it comes to handling economic matters. Will Wednesday night’s first
presidential debate make a difference?
With
a race this close, possibly but not
likely, Scott Rasmussen argues in his latest weekly syndicated column.
“Events
in the real world matter more than debates,” Scott writes. “Only in the
absence
of other news could a slight change in the race coming out of the
debates be
decisive.”
So
where do we stand in the real world? Just
15% of consumers rate the U.S. economy as good or excellent, while most
(55%)
give the nation's economy a poor rating. Among investors, 13% give the
U.S.
economy positive marks. Fifty-one percent (51%) feel the economy is in
poor
shape.
While
the raw numbers are discouraging, there
has been a modest increase in consumer confidence recently. For just
the second
time in three years, the number of Americans who predict a stronger
economy a
year from now (36%) is higher than those who expect a weaker one (34%).
But the
number who feel the economy will be stronger in five years’ time
remains near
its all-time low at 41%.
Most
Americans still don't see a full recovery
of the housing and stock markets happening in the next three years.
Just
36% think the United States has the best
economy in the world, although that’s up from 29% a year ago and back
to voter
attitudes in 2010. The good news for the president is that Americans
also have
more confidence in his economic advisers than they did before.
This
week, the Obama administration filed a
complaint with the World Trade Organization, charging China with
subsidizing
automakers and auto parts companies in their country to keep their
overseas
prices low. While most Americans blame this country’s bad economy on
government
policies at home rather than on overseas competitors, 55% also think
the
government does not do enough to protect U.S. manufacturers and
businesses from
foreign competition. Despite general support for free trade in theory,
54% of
Americans think the federal government should place tariffs on goods
from
countries that pay very low wages to their workers.
But
most voters don't think the economy will
get better no matter which candidate wins the White House in November.
Only 34%
think the economy is likely to get better if Obama is reelected and
Democrats
regain full control of Congress, marking little change from early July
when the
two sides ran nearly even. By comparison, 43% now believe the economy
is likely
to improve if Romney wins and the GOP is in charge of Congress.
Romney
also continues to hold a seven-point
lead in voter trust over the president when it comes to handling the
economy.
The candidates remain more closely divided in several other key issue
areas,
but the president has the advantage on energy issues.
At
the same time, voters in general are
slightly more confident that Obama has a better feel for the middle
class than
Romney by a 48% to 42% margin. Among voters who actually consider
themselves
middle class, however, Romney has a 46% to 44% edge in terms of which
candidate
they think understands their issues best.
Why
does the race remain virtually tied in both
the daily Presidential Tracking Poll and the daily Swing State Survey?
Perhaps
because while the economic news isn’t
great, it isn’t as bad as it has been. Americans overall are starting
to feel a
bit better about the economy, Scott Rasmussen explains in a new radio
update.
“They may not be better off than they were four years,” he says, “but a
growing
number are starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.” (Catch
Scott’s
radio updates Monday through Friday on stations across the country.)
For
example, while only 36% of voters now say
the country is heading in the right direction, that’s up eight points
from a
month ago and up 18 points from a year ago.
Longtime
Democratic Congressman Charlie Rangel,
Scott’s guest on this weekend’s edition of the nationally syndicated TV
show What
America Thinks, has a more partisan explanation for the state of the
presidential race. Romney, Rangel insists, is “more like a high school
kid
running for president than a mature person who seems as though he knows
what
he’s talking about, and that he could be in charge. No one can
challenge what
he did in the private sector, but he doesn’t seem as though he is sure
of
himself.”
Rangel
is one of several guests who will
discuss with Scott the current state of the presidential campaign and
look
ahead to the upcoming debates. This weekend's show is available on more
than 60
stations nationwide. A longer interview with Rangel will be released
online
early next week.
None
of the states Rasmussen Reports surveyed
this past week could be classified as a swing state. Romney still holds
a
double-digit lead in Arizona. The president has similar leads in Maine,
Massachusetts and Michigan. See Rasmussen Reports Electoral College
Projections
for an in-depth look at the state of the race nationally.
The
Senate races we looked at this past week
were slightly less lopsided but also no surprise. Democratic incumbents
are
leading in Michigan and Pennsylvania. Independent Angus King who is
expected to
caucus with Democrats if elected is well ahead in the U.S. Senate race
in
Maine. Republican Congressman Jeff Flake leads Democrat Richard Carmona
in the
race for retiring Senator Jon Kyl’s seat in Arizona.
In
Massachusetts, one of the nation’s marquee
Senate races, incumbent Republican Scott Brown and his Democratic
challenger
Elizabeth Warren remain tied with 48% support each. Overall, the latest
updates
in our Senate Balance of Power rankings suggest that the Democrats are
favored
to retain control of the Senate.
Republicans
lead by just one point on the
latest Generic Congressional Ballot.
In
the Middle East, the Administration claim
that recent anti-U.S. protests have been largely spontaneous and
prompted by an
anti-Islamic video posted on YouTube is rejected by most voters. Only
23% agree
that the video’s to blame. Eighty-five percent (85%) believe it is
likely that
terrorists were involved in the killing of U.S. Ambassador Christopher
Stevens
in Libya.
The
president in June 2009 in one of his first
major foreign policy initiatives delivered a highly publicized speech
in Cairo
reaching out to Muslims worldwide after the conflict of the Bush years.
But
only 18% of voters think U.S. relations with the Islamic world are
better now
than they were four years ago. As anger against America spreads in the
Middle
East, fewer voters believe the United States is winning the War on
Terror and
is safer today than before the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Read
the rest of the article at Rasmussen
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