President
Obama’s second term has not really been a disaster thus far, certainly not by
historical standards. If you need an
objective metric, try Gallup ’s presidential
approval ratings, which Gallup
has been tracking since Truman.
Virtually every President who has won reelection has suffered through
scandal or incompetence, most notably Nixon, Truman and George W. Bush, who all
fell to the low-to-mid 20’s, truly scary territory. Obama’s nadir of 38% (thus far) is more in
line with Reagan (40%) and below those of Ike (49%) and Clinton (53%).
Despite
modestly increasing numbers (Gallup ’s
latest is 45%, the same as the overall average last month among 25 polls),
Obama’s second term is largely stuck. He
is being helped along modestly by an ever-improving economy and Obamacare
enrollment numbers, and he is helping himself by essentially declaring war on
Congress (which has an approval rating of 15%) and by issuing a slew of executive
orders. But truly galvanizing events are
hard to manufacture.
At times
like these, presidents often look overseas for a new initiative or a juicy
conflict as a means of rallying Americans around their leadership. Perhaps they launch a Mideast peace
initiative (Clinton ) or look for a humanitarian
cause (Bush 43, fighting AIDS in Africa ). But Barack Obama has no luck – his latest
foreign crisis involves the intractable Vladimir Putin and his blatant land
grab of the Crimea portion of Ukraine
(and it is “Ukraine ,” not
“the Ukraine ”).
This is one
that will be difficult for Obama to win.
His fantasy roughly runs as follows:
he succeeds in getting the European Union to agree to tough economic
sanctions on Russia , a must
since Europe does $460 billion in trade with Russia ,
more than ten times the U.S. Putin, already feeling the adverse effects of
an imploding stock market, turns tail and removes his troops from Crimea and declares “mission accomplished” in protecting
those poor Russia-speaking Crimeans who were at such risk.
It ain’t
happening, of course. Putin is living in
his own reality (confirmed by no less a source than Angela Merkel) and the
notion of him cowering in the face of Western economic pressure is
laughable. Obama will win no points
here, and Crimea will likely go the way of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, regions
of Georgia
that went down the same break-off path in 2008, and are still separate today.
I am a bit
amused with Senator John McCain, who concluded that Putin’s actions are the
result of “a feckless American foreign policy in which nobody believes in America ’s strength
anymore.” This comes from a man who ran
perhaps the most feckless presidential campaign in modern memory. McCain’s well known fondness for risk-taking
resulted in 2008 strategic gems such as “Let’s Cancel the Debate” (he didn’t),
“Let’s Have an Economic Crisis Meeting at the White House” (they did and he
barely said a word while Obama basically ran the meeting, causing several Republicans
around that table to decide to vote for Obama) and, of course, “Let’s Have a
Vice President Who Thinks the Queen Runs England.” We can only shudder at how President McCain
might be handling this crisis – or President Palin.
There is a
big election in Florida
today, for the 13th District, vacated last year due to the death of
long-time Republican Representative John Young.
This is a classic swing district, a rare breed, that Barack Obama took
by a 50/49 margin over Mitt Romney. As
such, many see this race as a harbinger of the midterms. Democrat Alex Sink, former Chief Financial
Officer of Florida
is up against Young’s former aide, Republican David Jolly, with a Libertarian,
Lucas Overby in the mix. There have been
seven polls since February 1, and the average shows Sink ahead 44.5% to
42.7%. I think Sink wins by three,
48/45/7 over Jolly and then Overby.
OBAMA APPROVAL RATING
President Obama’s
net approval rating nudged upward a bit more, to a -7. His approval
rating is recovering – up five points in the last four months – but his disapproval rating has been quite
constant at the 51-52% level, a full four points higher than Election Day 2012. If Obama wants to be a possible force in the
midterms, the rebound has to put him into a net positive position.
Obama
Approval Rating
|
Election Day 2012
|
8-Dec
|
10-Jan
|
11-Feb
|
10-Mar
|
Approve
|
49.6
|
39.9
|
42.6
|
43.8
|
44.6
|
Disapprove
|
47.4
|
51.8
|
52.6
|
51.4
|
51.7
|
Net
|
2.2
|
-11.9
|
-10.0
|
-7.6
|
-7.0
|
OBAMACARE RATINGS
The
Obamacare ratings actually slipped a bit, although that may be more a function
of the mix of polls taken than a true trend.
But regardless, the forward progress since the launch debacle has not
sustained even as the enrollment numbers show marked increases, over 3.3
million as of February 1 and due for a surge to the end of March deadline (if
the Massachusetts experience is any indication). I believe the spotlight will return to
Obamacare once that deadline approaches, but recently it has been pretty
quiet…with the exception of Republican Congressional campaigning, of which
Obamacare-bashing is the centerpiece.
Obamacare
|
Election Day 2012
|
8-Dec
|
10-Jan
|
11-Feb
|
10-Mar
|
For/Favor
|
40.0
|
38.4
|
38.2
|
39.0
|
40.0
|
Oppose/Against
|
50.8
|
56.6
|
53.4
|
52.1
|
55.2
|
Net
|
-10.8
|
-18.2
|
-15.1
|
-13.1
|
-15.2
|
ECONOMETER
There was
little movement in the Econometer, as all measures teetered one way or the
other modestly. Obama has been reluctant
to push economy recovery as a centerpiece of his message as long as the
unemployment rate has remained on the high side, but if there is another spring
thaw that drives that rate closer to 6.0, you can imagine a sharp increase in
positive messaging as we near Election Day.
Econometer
|
Election Day 2012
|
8-Dec
|
10-Jan
|
11-Feb
|
10-Mar
|
Econometer
|
0.0
|
37.2
|
50.5
|
50.6
|
47.9
|
Unemployment Rate
|
7.9
|
7.0
|
6.7
|
6.6
|
6.7
|
Consumer Confidence
|
73.1
|
70.4
|
78.1
|
80.7
|
78.6
|
Price of Gas
|
3.71
|
3.34
|
3.37
|
3.38
|
3.48
|
Dow Jones
|
13,330
|
15,952
|
16,242
|
15,993
|
16,208
|
GDP
|
3.1
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
3.2
|
2.4
|
CONGRESSIONAL GENERIC BALLOT
The
Democrats have regained the upper hand in the generic ballot, albeit by a
rather slim margin. But the 1.8 point
spread is the largest since November, and bodes well as we head into Congressional primary season.
Generic
Congressional Ballot
|
Election Day 2012
|
8-Dec
|
10-Jan
|
11-Feb
|
10-Mar
|
Democrat
|
46.3
|
40.7
|
41.4
|
39.9
|
41.0
|
Republican
|
46.0
|
41.9
|
41.9
|
40.7
|
39.2
|
Net
|
0.3
|
-1.1
|
-0.5
|
-0.8
|
1.8
|
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