Obama's Approval Rating Much Worse Than It Looks

June 29, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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Proving once again that he is one of the nation’s most astute political analysts, the Washington Examiner's Michael Barone makes clear that President Barack Obama may be in more political trouble than he or many of his allies are prepared to publicly admit.

An alumnus of U.S. News & World Report, Barone deconstructs the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll and he shows that Obama’s negative 45 percent--48 percent job approval figures are deceptive and that the president is far weaker politically than the numbers suggest.

[See a slide show of the 10 keys to an Obama comeback.]

The poll, which admittedly is a snapshot of public opinion, shows the president has a 91 percent approval rating among black voters. “A little back of the envelope arithmetic,” Barone writes, “suggest that Obama’s job rating among the 88 percent or 89 percent of non-black respondents is about 39 percent positive and 54 percent negative.”

As he explains,

That’s pretty weak—a whole lot more negative than the numbers you usually see for all voters. This is hugely relevant to the 2010 elections. Most of the states with seriously contested Senate races or Democratic seats that seem almost certain to go Republican have below-national-average black percentages … Similarly, when you look at the list of target House seats very few have substantial black populations.

For the Republicans, it means they are much better positioned to make significant gains in the 2010 elections, something the recent NPR bi-partisan poll that only looked at 70 swing congressional districts also suggested.

[See a slide show of 11 hot races in November.]

These findings are also backed up by some intriguing anecdotal evidence, including the small number of Democrats who are starting to make clear that, while they would welcome a campaign visit by former President Bill Clinton they would be happier if Obama campaigned elsewhere.

There are, no doubt, some who will attack Barone’s analysis along the usual lines--but only because they don’t like what it projects. In any event that would be a case of attacking the messenger for the content of the message and would do little to demonstrate that his analysis runs wide of the mark.

 

Tags:
Democratic Party,
2010 Congressional elections,
Congress,
Republican Party,
Bill Clinton,
Barack Obama

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We've known this for some time. It's the liberal media that has it's head in the sand and refuses to admit his bad numbers and his bad presidency!

Dee of ID 6:22PM May 02, 2011

Who take these Polls? Why is it these people never call the Homes of Africans Americans? No body calls me and ask me nothing. Please.

millies of IA 5:08PM May 02, 2011

The very fact that Obama was elected destroys your "hypocrites" argument.

America is 76% white.

If you look at the 2008 statistics:

well over 95% of African Americans voted Obama.

56% of Whites voted Obama as well.

So, explain how this proves white people are racist?

If anything it would suggest that black people are racist, but I'm not trying to make that argument.

If Obama's approval rating is 39% among white Americans, then we have to assume that there are political reasons for this. It is idiotic to assume that people who were not racist enough to deny Obama the presidency would suddenly be racist enough take it away from him. Maybe it's time to stop looking at skin color and start evaluating this President in the same fashion that the 43 Presidents before him were evaluated.

mb of IL 11:56AM March 31, 2011

Peter Roff

Peter Roff

Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. Formerly a senior political writer for United Press International, he’s now affiliated with several public policy organizations including Let Freedom Ring, and Frontiers of Freedom. His writing has appeared in National Review, Fox News’ opinion section, The Daily Caller, Politico and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

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