WASHINGTON —
President Barack Obama earned his lowest marks ever on his handling of
the economy in a new Associated Press-GfK poll, which also found that an
overwhelming majority of Americans now describe the nation's financial
outlook as poor. A frustrated electorate could take it out on the party in power — Obama's Democrats — in the November elections. Eleven
weeks before the Nov. 2 balloting, just 41 percent of those surveyed
approve of the president's performance on the economy, down from 44
percent in April, while 56 percent disapprove. And 61 percent say the
economy has gotten worse or stayed the same on Obama's watch. Still,
three-quarters also say it's unrealistic to expect noticeable economic
improvements in the first 18 months of the president's term. And Obama's
overall approval rating was unaffected; it remained at 49 percent, in
part because most Americans still like him personally. Americans'
dim view of the economy grew even more pessimistic this summer as the
nation's unemployment rate stubbornly hovered near 10 percent. That's
been a drag on both Obama and Democrats, who control Congress. "The
economy is on life support," says Scott Bradley, 38, general manager of
a carpet store in Columbia, Mo. Bradley says he voted for Obama in 2008
but he wouldn't again. He blames Congress for the unemployment woes but
says, "Obama's policies are making the economy worse." Even
staunch Obama backers like college student Julius Taylor of Flint,
Mich., struggle to stay optimistic about the economy, particularly when
they see the recession's toll in their backyard. "I'd like to say it's
improving, but there are a lot of indicators it's not," says Taylor, 25. Viewpoints
like those have Democrats on edge as they try to hang onto comfortable
majorities in the House and Senate in a political environment made ever
more challenging by economic woes. Republicans are trying to
convince Americans that the GOP can create the jobs that Obama hasn't
delivered. Obama and his Democrats are pleading for the frustrated
public to give them more time to prove that their economic fixes will
work. "The truth is, it's going to take a few years to fully dig
ourselves out of this recession. It's going to take time to bring back 8
million jobs," the president said Tuesday while campaigning for
Democratic candidates in Seattle. "Anybody who tells you otherwise is
just looking for your vote." Democrats are keenly aware that they
face strong headwinds; 60 percent of people say the country's headed in
the wrong direction. And it's hard to overstate the importance of the
economy to voters; 91 percent of Americans say it's a top problem, with
unemployment close behind. A whopping 81 percent of people now
call the economy poor or very poor, up from 72 percent in June, and just
12 percent say it has improved in the past month, compared with 19
percent in June. Both are record measurements since AP-GfK started
asking those questions. "Everyone is scared — everyone," says
Gerda Chapman, 63, a retired schoolteacher in Harrison, Idaho, who
backed Obama and isn't ready to ditch him. "The man has not had a long
enough time and he's doing a good job." She, like him, urges patience:
"We're not out of the recession and we've got a ways to go. It's going
to take time, but it is on an upward trend." Stacey Pederson, 36, a
massage therapist and independent voter in Asheville, N.C., agrees that
it's improving. But, she says, more progress would be made "if we would
have cooperation within the two parties. It's getting to be really
difficult watching them fight." Neither party is faultless, adds Jeff Vick, 49, a self-employed consultant from Fort Worth, Texas. "Republicans
have just been incredibly greedy," he says, and Democrats are
instituting "un-American" policies that inhibit citizens' abilities to
earn a living. People have little trust in Democrats or
Republicans on handling the economy; less than half trust either. But
voters older than 64 and whites lean heavily toward the GOP. While
Congress' overall performance rating is at a miserable 24 percent,
Democrats in Congress are slightly more popular than Republicans; 37
percent approve of Democrats while 30 percent approve of Republicans in
Congress. But in a shift from earlier this summer, when Democrats
had an advantage, Republicans now are about even with Democrats on the
question of which party should win control of Congress. Among registered
voters, 49 percent say they would vote for the Republican candidate in
their congressional district — half say to express their opposition to
Obama — while 45 percent say they'd cast their ballot for the Democrat. Obama is suffering in other areas, too. Just
34 percent now call him an above average or outstanding president, down
from 42 percent in January. And 28 percent call him average, while 38
percent say he's even worse. Marks on how people view him personally
have fallen: 89 percent liked him personally in January, but now 82
percent do. Also, more people disapprove of his performance on the
following issues than approve: the federal budget deficit,
unemployment, health care, taxes and immigration. Conversely, he's
viewed more favorably than not on his handling of terrorism, the
environment, relationships with other countries and education. About
equal percentages of people view him positively and negatively on Iraq,
Afghanistan, energy and gas prices. The AP-GfK Poll was conducted
Aug. 11-16 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It
involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,007 adults nationwide
and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage
points. ___ Associated Press Polling Director Trevor
Tompson, AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP writers Alan
Fram, Lauren Sausser and Natasha T. Metzler contributed to this report. ___ Online: AP-GfK Poll: http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com.
Blogs | Twitter | Facebook | Newsletters




Comments