Rasmussen
Pole
What
They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key Polls
Saturday, January 12, 2013
33%
Say U.S. Heading in Right Direction
Generic
Congressional Ballot: Democrats 44%, Republicans 38%
Men
More Confident Than Women About Economy
When
it comes to politics, America is clearly two different
nations without much middle ground.
Half
of all likely voters now give President Obama positive marks
for leadership, his highest ratings since the early months of his
presidency.
But take a closer look: Eighty-nine percent (89%) of Democrats and 53%
of
voters not affiliated with either of the major political parties give
Obama
good or excellent marks for leadership. Just 16% of Republicans agree.
Obama’s
job approval ratings in the daily Presidential Tracking
Poll are also running at the highest levels of his presidency. But on
Friday,
for example, while 86% of Democrats approved of the job the president
is doing,
83% of GOP voters disapproved. Unaffiliated voters were evenly divided.
Thirty-three
percent (33%) of all likely voters say the country is
heading in the right direction. Fifty-eight percent (58%) think it’s
heading
down the wrong track. But, again, take a closer look: 54% of Democrats
think
the country is heading in the right direction. Eighty-nine percent
(89%) of
Republicans and 60% of unaffiliateds feel the country is on the wrong
track.
The
auto bailouts? Sixty-four percent (64%) of Democrats think
they were good for the country. Fifty-nine percent (59%) of Republicans
and 46%
of unaffiliated voters disagree. When told that the government will
still lose
money on them, most Republicans and unaffiliated voters consider the
bailouts a
failure, compared to 56% of Democrats who still deem them a success.
Ford,
the one automaker who didn't take a federal bailout, remains
the most popular of Detroit’s Big Three. General Motors was the most
popular
before the bailouts. Yet while Democrats have a favorable opinion of
all three
automakers, Republicans and unaffiliated voters view Ford much more
favorably
than the others.
The
U.S. government will reach its current $16.4 trillion debt
ceiling some time next month, and despite the current political
posturing most
voters think a deal to raise that ceiling is likely. But what kind of
deal?
Democrats tend to like one that raises the debt ceiling without any
significant
spending cuts. GOP and unaffiliated voters prefer a deal that includes
a
long-term plan to reduce the cost of entitlement programs including
Social
Security and Medicare.
But
these same Republicans balk at significant cuts to the defense
budget. GOP opposition to Obama’s nomination of former Senator Charles
“Chuck”
Hagel to be secretary of defense, for example, jumps from 46% to 62%
when
voters are told that he has called for defense budget cuts. Sixty-nine
percent
(69%) of Democrats and a modest plurality (43%) of unaffiliated voters
then
favor Hagel’s confirmation.
Gun
control? Americans nationwide show overwhelming support for
requiring strict background checks, waiting periods and safety courses
for
those wishing to obtain a gun. Americans also feel as strongly as ever
that the
average citizen has a constitutional right to own a gun. Fifty-eight
percent
(58%) of voters in the president’s party think the federal government
should
have the responsibility to make laws regarding gun ownership. A
plurality (41%)
of Republicans and 34% of unaffiliated voters feel those laws should be
the
responsibility of state governments.
Energy
development? Voters in general are more positive about the
Obama’s pursuit of both renewable and traditional energy sources than
they have
been since the first year of his presidency. But take a closer look:
Seventy
percent (70%) of Democrats rate the president’s development of
alternative
energy sources as good or excellent, but just 18% of Republicans and
38% of
unaffilliated agree. Seventy-five percent (75%) of voters in his party
give
Obama good or excellent marks for development of fossil fuel resources,
a view
shared by only 32% of unaffiliated voters. Sixty-six percent (66%) of
GOP
voters think the president is doing a poor job in this area.
The
recent “fiscal cliff” deal raised taxes on wealthier
Americans, but only 43% believe the economy is fair to the middle
class. That
overall number is little changed. However, before the deal, Democrats
were more
likely than Republicans to see the economy as unfair to the middle
class. That
is now reversed.
Still,
following the last-minute deal to avoid the “fiscal cliff,”
voters nationwide trust Democrats more than Republicans to handle the
economy
for the first time in over three-and-a-half years. Democrats are now
trusted
more on 10 out of 15 key issues regularly tracked by Rasmussen Reports.
Republicans lead on two, and the parties are tied on three others. The
GOP was
ahead on most of the issues prior to Election Day.
Democrats
now hold a six-point lead over Republicans on the
Generic Congressional Ballot. This is the ninth week in a row that the
Democrats have led on the ballot after the GOP held the advantage on it
for the
previous three-and-a-half years.
Even
while many voters still agree with the attitudes of the Tea
Party, views of that movement are at their lowest point ever. Only
eight
percent (8%) now say they are members of the Tea Party, down from a
high of 24%
in April 2010 just after passage of the national health care law.
The
Republican establishment’s response appears to be to declare
war on its own voters, Scott Rasmussen explains in his latest weekly
newspaper
column. Citing a recent news report, he notes that party leaders in
Washington
are “gearing up a new effort to protect incumbents and limit the
ability of
Republican voters to successfully challenge establishment candidates. …
“Mature
party leaders would spend a lot more time listening to Republican
voters rather than further insulating themselves from those voters,”
Scott
argues. “Unfortunately, by seeking to protect the insiders from the
voters, all
indications are that most establishment Republicans would rather blame
the
voters and keep their perks.”
In
this weekend’s edition of What America Thinks, Scott and his
guests will discuss public attitudes about the debt ceiling debate,
Hagel’s
nomination and the Tea Party. Scott also will be joined by former Naval
Intelligence Officer Mike Barrett for a discussion of the government's
handling
of last year’s murder of the U.S. ambassador in Libya and U.S.
involvement in
overseas conflicts. The show airs on 61 television stations nationwide.
Find a
station near you, and check local listings for times.
As
Congress and the president begin haggling over raising the
national debt ceiling, a plurality (44%) of all voters says they are
fiscally
conservative, but nearly as many (40%) consider themselves moderate in
this
area. Just 13% say they are fiscally liberal.
The
number of working Americans who now consider themselves middle
class is at its highest level in nearly four years at 69%, while the
number of
working poor has fallen to an all-time low of eight percent (8%).
At
week’s end, 34% of consumers think the U.S. economy is getting
better, but 42% say it's getting worse. Among investors, 37% believe
economic
conditions in the country are improving. Forty-two percent (42%)
disagree and
feel they are getting worse.
Eighty-six
percent (86%) of all Americans say they are paying more
for groceries than they were a year ago, and 72% expect that to go up
even more
over the next year. Most Americans lack confidence that the Federal
Reserve
Board can keep inflation under control…
Read
the rest of the article at Rasmussen
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