THE WEEK
This was another brutal week for the Trump Administration, but
it ended on two significant up notes that may help Trump in the next round of
polling: the mindboggling news of a potential Trump/Kim Jong Un summit, and the
February economic report that showed a 313,000 increase in jobs for the month,
the most since July, 2016 (which attracted little attention at the time, when a
fellow named Barack Obama was in the White House.)
Coming off the epic events of the prior week – the damaging
testimony of Hope Hicks and her subsequent resignation; the general demise (if
not departure) of Jared (“I’m Not Dead Yet”) Kushner; the public whipping of “DISGRACEFUL”
Jeff Sessions; Trump’s widely-mocked both-ends-of-the-spectrum positions on gun
control; the news that Robert Mueller was prowling around in Trump’s personal
finances – it was not a surprise to learn that Trump was not in a good mood. Nor did it take much “stratergizing” (a
much-beloved George W. Bush-ism that fully captures the depth of the thought
process) to predict that Trump would attempt to create new news to change the
hideous narrative enveloping the White House.
So he decided to start a trade war. Just like that! With all the forethought of a Bannon-esque
travel ban, Trump decided to slap a 25% tariff on all steel imports and 10% on
aluminum. You might have thought a five-alarm fire had broken out at the Chamber
of Commerce with the reaction, as businessmen and staunch Republicans belched smoke
about the negative impact such nativist moves would have on the U.S.
economy. Why even meek Paul Ryan himself
took the unusual step of opposing Trump
on the tariffs, which was previously thought to be congenitally impossible. In fact, politicians in Washington finally
agreed on something, universal condemnation of the proposed tariffs. About the only happy people were,
predictably, the CEO’s of steel and aluminum companies…and perhaps a certain
constituency in the steel-center Western Pennsylvania, where the 18th District just happens to be holding a hotly-contested special election on March
13 to replace disgraced Republican representative Tim Murphy (more on this race
from BTRTN on Monday).
Trump lost Chief Economic Adviser Gary Cohn in the process,
one of the few relatively stable domestic advisers in Trumpworld. Cohn had strenuously opposed the tariffs,
and all but stood in front of a tank in Tiananmen Square to prevent them, but
he lost that battle in the blink of an eye, to a fit of pique. Trump predicted that Cohn would “make another
couple of hundred million and then he’s going to maybe come back {to work for
Trump in the White House},” torturing English and logic in one fell swoop.
Then that low pressure system that has been annoying Team
Trump exploded into the full Stormy Daniels, when Sarah Huckabee Sanders, of
all people, revealed that Trump had won an arbitration hearing versus Daniels,
barring the porn star from discussing their affair. This gaffe, of course, was the first public
recognition that Trump himself had any involvement with Daniels, which
previously had been sloughed off as some matter involving Trump’s personal
lawyer, Michael Cohen. Details of Trump’s
involvement with Daniels emerged that would make Anthony Weiner blush.
Preconditions are already being put in place, steps North
Korea has to take before the talks are finalized, thus raising the very real
prospect they might never come off. And
nobody knows how the un-briefable Trump would conduct himself in such a
summit. As he himself said in one of his
better lines at the Gridiron Club, “As far as the risk of dealing with a madman
is concerned, that’s his problem, not mine.”
Did you say “gun control”?
{Sigh.} No new news on that
front.
THE NUMBERS
The major political indicators reflected these several difficult
weeks for Trump and the GOP. Trump’s approval rating dropped
by -2 points from 43% to 41%. The Dems jumped +3 points on the
generic ballot and are back up to a formidable +7, and the Trumpometer went up +1
on the strength of a climbing Dow. The
Trumpometer figure means that our five economic indicators – the Dow, the
unemployment rate, the price of gas, Consumer Confidence and the GDP -- are, on
average, up 13% since Trump’s Inaugural in January, 2017. (The full chart and methodology
explanations are at the bottom of this article.)
Last 4 Weeks
|
||||||
SaturData Review
|
Jan 2017 Inaug.
|
Jan 2018 Year 1
|
Wk ending Feb 16
|
Wk ending Feb 23
|
Wk ending Mar 3
|
Wk ending Mar 10
|
Trump Approval
|
48%
|
41%
|
43%
|
43%
|
43%
|
41%
|
Trump Net Approval
|
+4 pp
|
-14 pp
|
-10 pp
|
-11 pp
|
-11 pp
|
-13 pp
|
Generic Ballot
|
D + 6
|
D + 6
|
D + 7
|
D + 8
|
D + 4
|
D + 7
|
Trumpometer
|
0%
|
+19%
|
+13%
|
+13%
|
+12%
|
+13%
|
POLITICAL STAT OF THE WEEK
The steel and aluminum industries employ approximately
300,000 American workers today. The
number of Americans who work in industries that use steel and aluminum is 17 million, including 7 million in manufacturing
(e.g., automotive, beer) and 10 million in construction.
*******************************************************
Here is the complete SaturData chart with accompanying
methodology explanations:
SaturData Review
|
Jan 2017 Post-Inaug.
|
Wk ending Mar 3
|
Wk ending Mar 10
|
Change vs. Last Wk
|
Change vs. Jan 2017
|
Trump Approval
|
48%
|
43%
|
41%
|
-2 pp
|
-7 pp
|
Trump Disapproval
|
44%
|
54%
|
54%
|
+0 pp
|
+10 pp
|
Trump Net Approval
|
+4 pp
|
-11 pp
|
-13 pp
|
-2 pp
|
-17 pp
|
Generic Ballot
|
D + 6
|
D + 4
|
D + 7
|
+3 pp
|
+1 pp
|
Trumpometer
|
0%
|
+12%
|
+13%
|
+1 pp
|
+13 pp
|
Unemployment
Rate
|
4.7
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
0%
|
13%
|
Consumer
Confidence
|
114
|
125
|
125
|
0%
|
15%
|
Price
of Gas
|
2.44
|
2.67
|
2.68
|
0%
|
-10%
|
Dow-Jones
|
19,732
|
24,538
|
25,336
|
3%
|
28%
|
Most
recent GDP
|
2.1
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
0%
|
19%
|
Methodology
notes:
BTRTN calculates our
weekly approval ratings using an average of the four pollsters who conduct
daily or weekly approval rating polls: Gallup Rasmussen, Reuters/Ipsos and You
Gov/Economist. This provides consistent and accurate trending information and
does not muddy the waters by including infrequent pollsters. The outcome tends to mirror the RCP average
but, we believe, our method gives more precise trending.
For
the generic ballot, we take an average of the only two pollsters who conduct
weekly generic ballot polls, Reuters/Ipsos and You Gov/Economist, again for
trending consistency.
The Trumpometer aggregates a set of
economic indicators and compares the resulting index to that same set of
aggregated indicators at the time of the Trump Inaugural on January 20, 2017.
The basic idea is to demonstrate whether the country is better off economically
now versus when Trump took office.
The indicators are the unemployment rate, the Dow-Jones Industrial Average, the Consumer Confidence Index, the price of gasoline, and the GDP.
The indicators are the unemployment rate, the Dow-Jones Industrial Average, the Consumer Confidence Index, the price of gasoline, and the GDP.
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