Rasmussen
What
They Told Us: Reviewing Last
Week’s Key Polls
Saturday, February 23, 2013
38%
Say U.S. Heading In Right
Direction
Generic Congressional Ballot:
Democrats 43%, Republicans 37%
23% Say Their Personal Finances Are
Getting Better These Days
All
eyes are on Congress and the
president as the countdown to the March 1 spending cuts continues.
Scott
Rasmussen says in his latest
weekly newspaper column that “a panic is bubbling to the surface in
Washington,
D.C.” as this sequester deadline approaches. The process “will be
further proof
to voters that their elected officials are incapable of doing their
jobs. So
incapable, in fact, that automatic, arbitrary and thoughtless
budget-cutting is
a better option than anything Congress and the president could come up
with,”
he writes. “But the real reason for the panic in Washington is that the
American people ultimately may applaud the spending cuts. That might
mark the
beginning of the end for politics as usual.”
Scott
will discuss the sequester
cuts and other key issues with Senator Rand Paul on this weekend’s
edition of
What America Thinks. The
nationally
syndicated television show airs weekly on 61 stations. Find a station
near you.
Paul
is seen favorably by 35% of
voters. A plurality
(42%) of voters now
has a favorable opinion of Marco Rubio, the Florida senator who gave
the
Republican response to the State of the Union. Both have been mentioned
as
possible GOP presidential contenders in 2016. Tennessee Senator Bob
Corker
wouldn’t rule out a GOP presidential bid in 2016 in his appearance last
weekend
on What America Thinks.
Former
Democratic presidential
candidate, Howard Dean, commented on Scott’s show that the so-called
“fiscal
cliff” deal was a “disaster” for the Democrats. Dean added that
“somebody has
to tell the middle class that either your taxes are going to go up or
your
programs are going to get cut or else we're going to go into financial
oblivion, and nobody really wants to tell them that.”
Dean,
like most Democratic leaders,
wants more revenue for the government. However, following the tax hikes
in the
fiscal cliff deal and the payroll tax increase that took effect on
January 1,
there is little support for higher taxes. A plurality of Americans
opposes
reducing tax deductions for those who earn at least $150,000 a year,
but
they’re closely divided over whether the wealthy or the middle class
benefit
more from those deductions. Most
continue to agree, however, on the need for a simpler federal income
tax code.
Speaking
of deductions, Americans
believe income should be the deciding factor in how much someone pays
in taxes,
not whether they are married or have children.
Americans
overwhelmingly oppose the
idea of taxing the health insurance benefits provided by their
employers but
are open to taxing such benefits for workers who earn more than
$150,000 a
year.
Despite
a deeply held belief in
Washington that Congress reflects the views of the people, most
Americans don’t
share that sentiment. Just 11% believe Congress is a good reflection of
the
views of the American people.
The
president continues to earn the
approval of most voters when it comes to the job he is doing, and most
also
support his proposal to raise the minimum wage from $7.25 an hour to $9
an
hour. A narrow
plurality believes that
hiking the minimum wage will be good for the economy. However, most
voters
think the minimum wage should be left up to states anyway.
Additionally, 61%
think state governments should offer minimum wage jobs instead of
welfare payments
to the long-term unemployed.
The
president also has proposed
increased spending on education, but most voters don’t think that’s the
answer.
Even though taxpayers now spend nearly $10,000 per pupil on average in
the
public schools, just 18% of voters believe most high school graduates
have the
skills needed for college. Only 21% think most high school graduates
have the
skills needed to enter the work force.
Part
of the problem may be the
textbooks. Fifty-nine percent (59%) of voters believe that most school
textbooks are more interested in presenting information in a
politically
correct manner than in accuracy.
Obama
also called for legislative
action on global warming, but 66% think creating jobs is a more
important goal
than trying to stop global warming at this time.
Homeland
Security Secretary Janet
Napolitano told Congress recently that the U.S.-Mexico border is more
secure
than ever and that immigration reform legislation should focus its
attention
elsewhere. But most voters think more border security is needed, and
48%
believe offering citizenship to illegal immigrants already here will
just
encourage more to come.
Sixty-seven
percent (67%) think
legal immigration is good for America but don’t think it’s offensive to
regard
those who come here illegally as “illegal" immigrants as some
politicians
and activists have charged.
Some
worry that illegal immigrants
have been able to vote, while others complain that legitimate voters
are being
denied their voting rights. A bipartisan presidential commission is now
considering ways to streamline the election process while maintaining
security.
Most Americans like the idea of voting by mail but not same-day
registration.
Democrats
lead again this week on
the Generic Congressional Ballot.
Forty-four
percent (44%) of voters
now rate the president’s handling of issues related to health care as
good or
excellent. Nearly as many (42%) consider his performance in this area
to be
poor. Voter support for creating a health care exchange in their state
as part
of the president’s health care law is unchanged, but low voter
awareness
suggests it is not a top-of-mind issue for most at this time.
Support
for Senator Charles “Chuck”
Hagel, Obama’s nominee to be secretary of Defense, is down slightly,
although most
voters still feel he is likely to be confirmed for the high-level
Cabinet
position.
Official
Washington has been
sounding dire warnings about the impact of the sequester spending cuts
on the
economy, but here’s where things stand right now: Just one-in-four
consumers
and investors say their personal finances are getting better these days.
Confidence
in the short-term
housing market is now at its highest level in several years. Thirty-six
percent
(36%) of U.S. homeowners think the value of their home will go up over
the next
year. Fifty-one percent (51%) believe that the value of their home will
go up
over the next five years.
But
most Americans continue to see
the current housing situation as a buyer’s market. Just 22% think,
generally
speaking, that this is a good time for someone in their area to sell a
house.
Forty-two
percent (42%) Americans
now say they owe less money than they did 12 months ago. That's the
highest
level of solvency in regular surveys since April 2009...
Read
the rest of the article at Rasmussen
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