Wednesday, March 06, 2013
Election bump over, Obama approval drops to 43 percent - Reuters/Ipsos poll
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Less than two months into his second term, President Barack Obama's approval rating has dropped and Americans blame him and his fellow Democrats almost as much as his Republican opponents for a fiscal mess.
A Reuters/Ipsos online poll released on Wednesday showed 43 percent of people approve of Obama's handling of his job, down 7 percentage points from February 19.
U.S. President Barack Obama departs the Oval Office of the White House in Washington before departing to visit wounded military personnel at the Walter Reed National Military Center in Bethesda, Maryland, March 5, 2013. REUTERS/Larry Downing |
Most of that steep drop came in the week to February 26 when it was becoming clear that Washington was going to be unable to put aside partisan differences and agree to halt automatic budget cuts which started last Friday.
Confounding the White House's efforts to blame Republicans for the cuts, most respondents in the online survey hold both Democrats and Republicans responsible.
Obama shot out of the gate in January at the start of his second four years in the White House, promising gun control and immigration legislation as well as efforts to tackle climate change and expand gay rights.
But Ipsos pollster Julia Clark said the survey shows Obama's honeymoon is now over, partly due to the "sequestration" cuts which will likely curtail public services like air traffic control and national parks as well as funding for the Pentagon.
"People are seeing things are back to business as usual in Washington," she said. "They are reading about the immense fallout this is going to have in terms of how it's going to affect the military and individuals."
Thirty-eight percent of Americans believe all the political actors involved - Republican and Democratic members of Congress along with Obama - deserve most of the blame for the cuts.
Twenty-seven percent think Republicans in Congress are responsible, 17 percent blamed Obama and 6 percent thought Democrats were to blame. Nearly half of independent voters, 49 percent, said both sides deserve the blame.
"I think this frustration is being reflected certainly in their view of the president and Congress as well. This is a pox on everyone's house really," Clark said.
The fall in Obama's rating was similar to that in the Gallup three-day average tracking poll which shows his approval dropping 7 percentage points from late February to last weekend before recovering slightly.
WHITE HOUSE DEFENSIVE
That survey put the White House on the defensive on Tuesday. Spokesman Jay Carney cautioned that the result should not detract from Obama's efforts to fix thorny tax and spending issues after a convincing election defeat of Republican candidate Mitt Romney last November.
"Before we say anything is clear based on one poll, could we just remember, just think back a few months to the summer and fall of 2012, and understand that we're here focused on the president's agenda, getting the work done that we think is most beneficial to the middle class," he told a briefing.
Obama is now facing questions over whether he and fellow Democrats miscalculated the budget showdown and especially their messaging strategy of making frequent graphic warnings that public services were about to be decimated by cuts.
The strategy seemed aimed at having the public put pressure on Republican lawmakers to cede to White House demands to include tax increases as part of a solution to halt sequestration.
But tax hikes were always going to be a tough sell to Republicans, said William Galston, a Brookings Institution senior fellow who was a domestic policy adviser to President Bill Clinton
"Opposition to taxes is about the only thing holding the current Republican Party together," Galston said. "I can't imagine any Republican leader proposing a new deficit reduction package including tax increases and holding onto his job for very long."
While the budget battle are complex, the Reuters/Ipsos poll showed many Americans are paying attention. The poll found 35 percent of those surveyed are paying a little bit of attention to the fight, 27 percent a fair amount and 9 percent a great deal. More than a quarter, 28 percent, knew nothing at all about it.
In the poll, 1,797 adults were interviewed between March 1-5.
The precision of the Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.
(Editing by Alistair Bell and Eric Walsh)
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
- Penang freak storm: Prayer held at Jln Macalister for Lim Chin Aik
- Boy dies while sliding down school staircase railing
- Immigration officer chides UNHCR staff for delaying court process
- Lahad Datu: Esscom dismisses claims of clashes with 400 Sulu gunmen

- Bar Council: Coversion to Islam of two Hindu kids in Negri Sembilan unconstitutional
- Three nabbed hours after robbing book shop, mobile phone outlet in Nibong Tebal
- Hisham: Special squad to be set up to improve motorbike lanes
- Hair salon owner jailed for cannabis possession, wife goes free
- Prosecution wins appeal against Yazid Sufaat's acquittal over terror charge
- RCI on Sabah illegals: Problem lies with integrity of enforcers, says Upko
- Lynas drops defamation suit against Save Malaysia Stop Lynas
- UNHCR: Only 10pc of refugees in Malaysia resettled last year
- Families of Batang Kali massacre send David Cameron "please apologise" postcards
- Myanmar temporarily stops supply of workers to Malaysia

- Sabah state assembly: Argument over position of Opposition leader
- Berjaya Sports Toto FY earnings down 5.1% to RM384.97m (Update)
- Market sentiment turns for the better, CIMB, Maybank up
- Westports to see 25% cut in fuel costs with LWK transmission system
- Hibiscus Petroleum unit gets US$10m investment
- Aeon Credit Services to expand fee business
- MMHE: Oil price to determine customers' decisions on projects
- Malaysia's BiotechCorp raises profile at Montreal World Congress
- 1MDB to raise US$1b from power assets
- Securities Commission to host PRS exhibition on June 29
- Maybank, Tenaga lift KLCI out of the red (Update)
- Mudajaya scouts for regional power plants to boost recurring income
- Astro launches 11 new channels, 5 new packages
- Glove makers buck cautious market
- Fitters advances on venture into renewable energy sector
- AmResearch maintains "Buy" on Sarawak Cable Bhd
- Brazil shaken by largest protests in 20 years
- Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan faces baby sex test inquiry
- Afghan forces take over security from NATO
- At least 60 feared dead as monsoon lashes north India
- Defiant Snowden promises more leaks
- Tensions rise as Bulgarian protesters pressure PM to resign
- 'No alternative' to Palestinian state: Bill Clinton in Israel
- Obama defends Internet snooping program
- Brutal golf course dooms US Open hopefuls in final round
- Queen’s title will boost Wimbledon bid, says Andy Murray
- Chong Wei misses the days top players bring out the best in him
- Results worldwide
- Malaysia target 30 golds at ASG
- World No. 1 hopes Daren and Wei Feng will step up their game
- Kisona stays focused ahead of Asian Junior Championships
- Spurs on brink of another NBA title
- Clarke: Hard for Warner to retain Test spot
- Costa retains Tour of Switzerland crown
- Justin Rose out-duels Mickelson to capture US Open title
- McIlroy loses his cool and takes it out on club
- Aussie confident his Day will come at a Major
- Mickelson suffers most agonising Open near-miss
- The long wait for 15th Major continues for world No. 1 Woods
- Penang freak storm: Architect: force that hit Lim’s car would crush anything
- Penang freak storm: ‘I saw his spirit, he was crying’
- EPF plans ruling for new contributors
- ‘Arigato’ for Japan’s decision on visas
- Penang freak storm: Family grieves as search gets called off
- 15-year-old arrested after ordering five air rifles with brass bullets online
- Meth head snatch thief in the bag
- Penang freak storm: Cops get CCTV footage of Jln Macalister in probe to see how Lim Chin Aik died
- Woman slashed by rival meat seller
- Penang freak storm: Inquest to be held to certify death of missing hawker
- ‘Arigato’ for Japan’s decision on visas
- EPF plans ruling for new contributors
- Penang freak storm: Architect: force that hit Lim’s car would crush anything
- Blue form route to AirAsia X IPO
- Penang freak storm: ‘I saw his spirit, he was crying’
- MAHB to impose penalties on UEMC-Bina Puri for KLIA2 delay
- 15-year-old arrested after ordering five air rifles with brass bullets online
- Zahid: Government to review guidelines for hiring foreign workers to curb abuse, improve work conditions
- Address food hygiene issue seriously, says Chua
- Astro launches 11 new channels, 5 new packages

