NEWSWEEK Poll: Democrats May Not Be Headed for Midterm Bloodbath - Newsweek
As Democrats prepare for considerable losses in the November elections, there’s reason to believe the party in power may not be headed for the bloodbath it might expect. According to a new NEWSWEEK Poll, President Obama’s approval rating—47 percent—indicates that the party is better off this year than Republicans were in 2006, when the GOP lost 30 House seats, and than the Democrats were in 1994, when they lost 52 House seats.
NEWSWEEK Poll: Democrats May Not Be Headed for Midterm Bloodbath - Newsweek
As Democrats prepare for considerable losses in the November elections, there’s reason to believe the party in power may not be headed for the bloodbath it might expect. According to a new NEWSWEEK Poll, President Obama’s approval rating—47 percent—indicates that the party is better off this year than Republicans were in 2006, when the GOP lost 30 House seats, and than the Democrats were in 1994, when they lost 52 House seats.
Actual poll results
http://nw-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/pdf/1004-ftop.pdf
Health care reform has already passed, and that victory alone is more than worth a drubbing in the polls in 2010.
NEWSWEEK Poll: Democrats May Not Be Headed for Midterm Bloodbath - Newsweek
As Democrats prepare for considerable losses in the November elections, there’s reason to believe the party in power may not be headed for the bloodbath it might expect. According to a new NEWSWEEK Poll, President Obama’s approval rating—47 percent—indicates that the party is better off this year than Republicans were in 2006, when the GOP lost 30 House seats, and than the Democrats were in 1994, when they lost 52 House seats.
Actual poll results
http://nw-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/pdf/1004-ftop.pdf
Eh, Newsweek polls are notoriously inaccurate. Rasmussen is the polling firm I trust, as through the past 3 election cycles, they've been the most accurate on election day. Take a look at these numbers, they certainly suggest something quite different...
________________________________________________________________
58% Favor Repeal of the Health Care Law, 36% Are Opposed
________________________________________________________________
Voters Now Trust Republicans More On All 10 Key Issues
Education 40% 41%
Health Care 40% 48%
Iraq 40% 43%
Economy 39% 47%
Social Security 38% 44%
Government Ethics 38% 40%
National Security 37% 49%
Afghanistan 36% 43%
Taxes 36% 52%
Immigration 35% 44%
______________________________________________________________
Generic Congressional Ballot: Republicans 47%, Democrats 38%
________________________________________________________________
16% Say Congress Doing A Good or Excellent Job; 56% Say Poor
Rasmussen Reports™: The Most Comprehensive Public Opinion Data Anywhere
In general, I don't trust generic ballot polls (would you vote Republican or Democrat) because people have a tendency to view their own representative differently than the party as a whole.
Cook Political Report has 40 seats in "toss-up" (largely Democrats) and an additional 36 leaning (again, largely Democratic).
For instance, a guy named Mike Ross, D-AR is in a district rated R+7 (meaning largely Republican) and he considered likely to be safe as a Democrat.
Additionally, since this is nation-wide polling, it's also including those people in districts that are simply never going to change party because of gerrymandering.
You really have to focus on the 40 or so seats that are actually at risk to see what's going to happen.
Republicans are going to make gains, for sure. I still don't think they'll take a majority, though. If they do, it will be relatively slim.
Honestly, I've reached the point of not really caring which party is in control. I just want actual governing to occur. And by governing - I mean serving all Americans, even those you disagree with. Both parties have become victims of over-estimating their political capital.
Sadly, if Republicans take control, I fear that they will merely continue this trend.
Everyone - from Bush to Delay to Cheney to Obama to Pelosi to Reid keep thinking they have a "mandate" when they win.
From now on, I want my leaders to realize, that unless they won like 80 - 90% of the vote, they've not been given a mandate to do anything. They've been given permission to represent their community - and usually by a slim to moderate margin.
Undoing that will be Job #1 for the next president.
That would mean that Republicans would have to have A) a majority in the House in 2013, B) a 60-seat supermajority in the Senate in 2013, and C) the White House in 2013.
It's not going to happen, even if the Democrats take a thumpin' in the polls this year. Dream on.
Undoing that will be Job #1 for the next president.
That's over 6 years away.....it will be old news by then.
HA! You got two if you're lucky and he doesn't get impeached before that.
j-mac
Impeached on what basis? I swear, if Clinton and Bush can weather all the **** they pulled, Obama will be just fine.
There are some variables that make this very uncertain...already mentioned in some cases.
1-Will the Tea Party actually detract from republican support (if a tea party condidate loses and its the same ol republicans running, will people bother to vote-will defeated candidates run for office as independents and split the conservative vote)
2-There was a swell and excitement with minority voters and youth voters to both be rid of Bush and to elect the first black president. Can the democrats do anything to inspire those folks to vote.
3-Will those that already voted for democrats be upset because they arent seeing all those hopeful changes in their lives.
If I was a betting man...and I am but not on things I have no control over...but Id say at the end of the day the dems will have a 54/46 majority in the senate and will likely keep the house by 3-4 seats.
There are some variables that make this very uncertain...already mentioned in some cases.
1-Will the Tea Party actually detract from republican support (if a tea party condidate loses and its the same ol republicans running, will people bother to vote-will defeated candidates run for office as independents and split the conservative vote)
2-There was a swell and excitement with minority voters and youth voters to both be rid of Bush and to elect the first black president. Can the democrats do anything to inspire those folks to vote.
There is something missing from the poll - How much the base is energized for each party. The GOP base is revved up, but the Democrat base is, for the most part, apathetic.
NEWSWEEK Poll: Democrats May Not Be Headed for Midterm Bloodbath - Newsweek
As Democrats prepare for considerable losses in the November elections, there’s reason to believe the party in power may not be headed for the bloodbath it might expect. According to a new NEWSWEEK Poll, President Obama’s approval rating—47 percent—indicates that the party is better off this year than Republicans were in 2006, when the GOP lost 30 House seats, and than the Democrats were in 1994, when they lost 52 House seats.
Actual poll results
http://nw-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/pdf/1004-ftop.pdf
There are some variables that make this very uncertain...already mentioned in some cases.
1-Will the Tea Party actually detract from republican support (if a tea party condidate loses and its the same ol republicans running, will people bother to vote-will defeated candidates run for office as independents and split the conservative vote)
2-There was a swell and excitement with minority voters and youth voters to both be rid of Bush and to elect the first black president. Can the democrats do anything to inspire those folks to vote.
3-Will those that already voted for democrats be upset because they arent seeing all those hopeful changes in their lives.
If I was a betting man...and I am but not on things I have no control over...but Id say at the end of the day the dems will have a 54/46 majority in the senate and will likely keep the house by 3-4 seats.
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