The Quinnipiac University National Poll released on January 22nd reveals that American voters rate President Barack Obama’s leadership on the economy, jobs, healthcare as very poor; his only positive marks come from fighting terrorism. Barack Obama’s first Presidential campaign narrative argued that President George W. Bush and the Republicans were so interested in fighting a “War on Terror” they had failed America at home.
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At his victory speech on November 5, 2008, President-elect Obama bellowed: “Tonight, because what we did in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America.”
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According to the Gallup Poll after 1492 days in office for President Obama and President Bush, they have virtually identical public approval ratings of 46%. But Americans are 24% more dissatisfied with their government under Obama than under Bush. The President’s party usually suffers significant congressional election losses in his sixth year of his Administration. But with Obama’s popularity at the same Bush levels that caused Republicans huge losses in 2006 plus voter dissatisfaction with government 50% higher, the Democratic Party appears poised to suffer an epic election disaster in 2014.
The November 2006 United
States midterm elections featured contests for all 435 seats in the House of
Representatives, 33 seats in the Senate, 36 state governorships, and many
legislatures. The elections resulted in a convincing Democrat Party victory.
They captured of 30 seats to take control of the House of Representatives, 6
seats to take control of the Senate, 6 governorships and took control of 4 more
legislatures from the Republicans. The election was also the first time in
American history in which the losses for one side were so lopsided that the
victorious party did not lose a single Incumbent or open seat in Congress or in
a governor’s mansion.
Midterm elections tend to act
as referendum on the President’s popularity and the state of the nation. The
American public views the elections as an opportunity to express their support
or opposition for the President concerning whether the country is heading in
the right direction; optimism over the state of the economy; whether the
country is at peace or at war; and his overall performance. The reason for the
Democratic Party’s 2006 takeover included the decline of the public image of
George W. Bush, dissatisfaction of the handling of both Hurricane Katrina and
the War in Iraq, Bush’s legislative defeat regarding Social Security Reform,
and the “culture of corruption” as the result of a series of scandals involving
Republican politicians in 2006.
When Quinnipiac Pollsters
asked voters in January 2014 what should be the “the top priority for President
Obama and Congress in 2014”; 18% listed healthcare, 16% listed jobs or
unemployment and 15% said the economy. These “bread and butter” issues have
traditionally been the Democrats’ strength. But according to Quinnipiac Polling
Institute Assistant Director Tim Mallory, “It’s the economy, Mr. President, say
dissatisfied American voters who are not yet willing to give President Barack
Obama a thumbs up on his presidency.” The media may blame Republican
intransigence and a do-nothing-Congress for fru
The President’s party has
always lost seats in the House of Representatives in midterm elections, with
the only exceptions since 1900 being 1934 and 1998. Those losses are larger in
a President’s second term because voters get increasingly “tired” of the same
leader as time goes on. The only recent exception was Bill Clinton, whose party
lost its majority in the 1994 Republican landslide gain of 52 seats. The
Republicans over-played their popularity with voters when they impeached the
President, but failed to get enough Senate votes to throw him out of office.
The midterm losses by the
President’s party are usually explained by the “surge and decline” thesis:
higher turnout for the President’s party in Presidential elections leads to
lower enthusiasm and much lower turnout in the off-years. After six years, the
Presidential support fades after having to make political decisions that
alienate groups of voters. Since the 1930s, the average loss for the
President’s party has been 6 seats in the Senate and 35 seats in the House.
President Bush’s party was pummeled in the 2006 mid-term over faulty intelligence that led to the invasion of Iraq and for his poor response to Hurricane Katrina. President Obama and his party’s poll numbers were hammered in 2013 for the disastrous roll-out of Obamacare, revelations about sweeping domestic government surveillance, and his efforts to pass divisive legislation for both gun control and immigration in the same year.
President Bush’s party was pummeled in the 2006 mid-term over faulty intelligence that led to the invasion of Iraq and for his poor response to Hurricane Katrina. President Obama and his party’s poll numbers were hammered in 2013 for the disastrous roll-out of Obamacare, revelations about sweeping domestic government surveillance, and his efforts to pass divisive legislation for both gun control and immigration in the same year.
But Obama has set his party up
for even more severe voter retaliation in 2014. By limiting the 2013 initial
roll-out of Obamacare to just 11 million people, he has doomed 270 million
Americans to suffer anxiety about the impacts of the wildly unpopular program
during an election year. This may explain why the January 22nd Gallup Poll
reveals that an all-time high of 65% of Americans are dissatisfied with the
U.S. system of government and its effectiveness works; versus 41% for President
Bush in 2006, who the press referred to at the time as a “very unpopular
president.”
If the Republicans only
achieve the average gain of an opposing party in the 6th year of Presidents’
term, they will pick-up six seats for control the Senate and push their
majority in the House of Representatives to 68 seats. But with President
Obama’s approval rating at the same level as President Bush plus voter’s
dissatisfaction with government 24% higher, Democrats appear to be facing an
epic election disaster.
Chriss Street is a frequent
contributor to Breitbart. Follow his blog at
http://www.chrissstreetandcompany.com/ and hear his weekday radio show at
http://agenda21radio.com/
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