Monday, June 8, 2009

The Obama Dichotomy Widens

We've talked about the dichotomy between Barack Obama's favorability and the favorability of his policies, specifically that while he's still viewed very favorably his policies are not.  Here's another great example of that gap widening even further:

Gallup's latest polling shows that the American electorate has begun to lose patience with Obamanomics.  While Barack Obama continues to maintain high personal approval ratings, his budgetary policies have lost the majority.  For the first time, Obama has more people disapproving of his spending and deficit plans than approving:

While 67% of Americans view President Barack Obama favorably, his overall job approval rating and his ratings on specific areas are less positive. At the low end of the spectrum, only 45% of Americans approve of Obama's handling of federal spending, and 46% of his handling of the federal budget deficit. …

Obama's job approval rating for his handling of the economy has dropped from 59% in February to 55% today, while his disapproval rating has risen by 12 points, from 30% to 42%. The fact that Obama's approval on the economy has become more negative over this time period is of interest, given that Gallup's measure of consumer mood has become more positive between March and the current time. …

Gallup has measured Obama's handling of the federal budget deficit only twice — once in March and again in the current survey — and his ratings have become slightly more negative over that time. The percentage of Americans approving has dropped by three points, while the percentage disapproving has increased by four points.

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[T]he spending and deficit numbers matter a great deal.  Obama has put most of his focus on these two areas, and the future of his presidency and his grand plans to reorganize the American economy depend on steady support in these precise areas.  He's not getting it.  A plurality opposes him on his handling of the deficit, which might explain the Goolsbee spin this weekend, attempting to blame Bush for a budget created by Congressional Democrats when they bypassed Bush at the end of his term.

Even worse, a majority now opposes his spending practices, 51%-45%.  The latter number comes closer and closer to the base level of his own party, which means Obama is now losing independents on spending.  This shows the big opportunity for the GOP in next year's midterms, when the lack of economic progress from Porkulus will become even more obvious.  If they can focus on nothing else other than runaway spending and massive deficits, and the dangers of allowing both to run unchecked in a Democratic-run DC, the GOP can beat a personally popular President and challenge for control of the House, if not the Senate, where the numbers are more difficult.

The American people apparently want to give Obama the benefit of the doubt for any number of reasons -- he's young and charismatic, he's the first black President, he's relatively new on the job -- but they soundly reject his policies.  This, then, is the mission for conservatives and Republicans in the next 18 months: to anchor these failed and unpopular policies to Obama himself.  Why do you think he's constantly out there blaming Bush for every bad thing in the world?  Because the longer he escapes responsibility for his own bad policies, the longer it will be until the American people demand a reckoning of those who are truly responsible - Obama and the Democrats.  If they can push it off long enough, they'll solidify an unprecedented amount of control over an incredible swath of the newly socialized country.  To prevent it, we must spread the truth of what's going on and who is responsible for those results to our families, our friends, our co-workers, and our neighbors.

The numbers show the dichotomy is ripe for the exposing, and it will only get bigger as Obama's politics continue to tank the nation.  This anchoring process is absolutely critical, and is already underway in the blogosphere...but it needs to spread beyond those who watch politics into the realm of those who do not.  While it is a giant undertaking that will be a difficult uphill battle because of the media's panting, hyperventilating suck-uppery to Obama, it is something on which we absolutely must not give up.  The future of our nation rests on it.

There's my two cents.

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