The bottom
fell out on the Obama Administration in November. Or has it?
Many commentators believe the healthcare.gov launch debacle will color Obama’s
entire second term, with ever-tumbling approval ratings. I actually think otherwise, but more on that later.
To be sure,
when the Republicans finally got out of their own way – that is, after the end
of self-inflicted distraction of the government shutdown – the website disaster
was in the hot lights, with predictable consequences to Obama’s approval numbers. What had been gradual erosion since Election
Day accelerated into a free fall, with his approval net rating at a record low
-11.9 (reflecting 27 polls in the last month).
Interesting, over the last month the “disapprove” rating held, but the
“approves” declined, indicating erosion among Obama’s true supporters, rather
than simply disaffected fence-straddlers as before.
Obama
Approval Rating
|
Election Day 2012
|
5-Sep
|
5-Oct
|
8-Nov
|
8-Dec
|
Approve
|
49.6
|
45.1
|
45.3
|
45.5
|
39.9
|
Disapprove
|
47.4
|
49.6
|
51.5
|
52.5
|
51.8
|
Net
|
2.2
|
-4.5
|
-6.2
|
-6.9
|
-11.9
|
From a
historical perspective, Obama is still far from “disastrous” territory. Using Gallup data (which goes back the
furthest and covers every post-WW II President), Obama’s lowest approval rating
at this point was 38% from November 21-23 (it has inched back up to 42% as of
November 25 to December 1). Every
post-WW II President had seen a lower number than that, with the exception of
Ike (48%) and JFK (56%). Four Presidents
dropped all the way into the 20’s: George
H.W. Bush (29%), Carter (28%), George W. Bush (25%) and Nixon (24%). Obama is more in the company of Clinton and
Ford, who both bottomed out at 37%, and Johnson and Reagan (both at 35%).
I feel
reasonably certain that Obama’s second term has not been completely compromised
by the website failures. In fact, with
the relatively strong performance of the website since the latest fixes, we are
already seeing headlines such as this one…
Consumer Reports
on Fixed Healthcare.gov Site: "It's Terrific"
There is
strong demand for health care among the uninsured, and some state exchanges,
that have not experienced any website problems, such as California , are on track with their sign-up
estimates. In these states younger
people, badly needed to make the coverage economically viable for insurers, are
signing up at strong rates as well.
There is no reason to believe California
differs from other states, so we can infer, as initially planned, that millions
will indeed sign up nationally by March 31 if the website performance holds up.
Obama got
into further trouble in the month with his longstanding claim that “if you like
your health care plan, you can keep it.”
I can personally attest to the fallacy of this promise (we liked our
coverage, and we indeed had to change it).
But while the claim turned out to be false for about 3% of the
population, and the furor from the claim has hurt Obama’s “trust” scores, I
foresee little long-term damage.
For now,
Obamacare is more unpopular than ever, and a whopping 18.5 percentage points
net negative. But look for this number
to begin improving, perhaps as early as next month.
Obamacare
|
Election Day 2012
|
5-Sep
|
5-Oct
|
8-Nov
|
8-Dec
|
For/Favor
|
40.0
|
41.0
|
39.8
|
41.6
|
38.3
|
Oppose/Against
|
50.8
|
52.0
|
51.7
|
49.3
|
56.8
|
Net
|
-10.8
|
-11.0
|
-11.8
|
-7.6
|
-18.5
|
And the
congressional “generic ballot” has slipped back into more or less a dead heat,
with the Democratic gains in the government shutdown battle completely rolled
back in the wake of healthcare.gov mess.
Generic
Congressional Ballot
|
Election Day 2012
|
5-Sep
|
5-Oct
|
8-Nov
|
8-Dec
|
Democrat
|
46.3
|
38.4
|
41.9
|
45.2
|
40.7
|
Republican
|
46.0
|
38.8
|
38.4
|
39.5
|
41.9
|
Net
|
0.3
|
-0.4
|
3.4
|
5.7
|
-1.1
|
And yet,
the economy continues to recover. GDP
for the 3rd quarter was revised upward to 3.6%, gas prices continued
to fall and the stock market continued to rise.
Most importantly, a healthy jobs report was released on Friday, with
204,000 jobs added and the unemployment rate falling to 7.0%, the lowest in the
Obama Administration. All of this
contributed to a sharp rise in the Econometer, from 28.3 to 36.7. While the economy is still in only modest
recovery, there is no doubt that the trajectory is upward.
Econometer
|
Election Day 2012
|
5-Sep
|
5-Oct
|
8-Nov
|
8-Dec
|
Econometer
|
0.0
|
32.1
|
34.0
|
28.3
|
36.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unemployment Rate
|
7.9
|
7.3
|
7.2
|
7.3
|
7.0
|
Consumer Confidence
|
73.1
|
81.5
|
79.7
|
71.2
|
70.4
|
Price of Gas
|
3.71
|
3.65
|
3.59
|
3.40
|
3.34
|
Dow Jones
|
13,330
|
15,098
|
15,308
|
15,395
|
15,952
|
GDP
|
3.1
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
3.6
|
3.6
|
This month
also saw a major shift in the Senate that could have consequences well beyond
the health care buzz that dominated the news.
The Senate voted to weaken the filibuster provisions to allow 50, not 60
votes, as the standard for bringing Presidential appointees to a vote. (Supreme Court appointees are exempt from
this, as are bills.) Thus the Democrats
successfully called the Republicans’ bluff with their tactic of bringing three
nominees in a row to the Senate, each with impeccable credentials. The Republicans stonewalled all three,
leading to the long-discussed change. Look
for more judges to get through (though some hurdles still remain) – including
highly conservative ones should the Republicans regain the White House.
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