Democratic Support for Obama Continues to Erode
WASHINGTON & SANTA
FE, NM (By
Edward-Isaac Dovere,
Politico as edited
by Hispanic News)
September 15, 2011
In Democratic
strongholds from
Vermont to
California ― not to
mention New York
City, where the
president helped
sink his party’s
nominee in Tuesday’s
special election ―
Obama support is
eroding with the
consensus ― he’s
moving unmistakably
in the wrong
direction.
Those aren’t the
only deep blue
places where
dissatisfaction in
the Democratic base
on everything from
health care to
Afghanistan to the
environment to
deporting 1,000,000
Hispanics is eating
away at what should
be far healthier
polling numbers.
Even Democratic
bases like
Connecticut or
Maryland are
starting to run away
from re-electing
Obama.
Pollsters point to
the
canary-in-the-coalmine
factor: if Obama
can’t hold these
voters, they say,
it’s a sign his
wider support among
the reliably
Democratic
electorate of
liberals, labor,
Hispanics, young
people, Jews and
other key blocs is
withering. They
won’t be there in
large numbers to put
him over the top
again in borderline
states, and they
won’t be there to
feed his campaign
money and provide
volunteer support at
the levels they did
in 2008.
Tuesday’s election
in New York’s
heavily Democratic
Queens- and
Brooklyn-based 9th
District proved to
be an extreme
manifestation of
Obama’s blue state
problem: His
approval rating was
at 43 percent in a
Sept. 9 Siena
Research Institute
poll and 31 percent
in a Sept. 11
automated poll by
Public Policy
Polling, a
Democratic firm. By
contrast, Democratic
Gov. Andrew Cuomo
posted a 75 percent
approval rating in
the district,
according to the
Siena poll.
“It is not per se a
Democratic problem,
it’s a problem with
this president,”
said Siena spokesman
Steve Greenberg.
Siena’s been picking
up on the trend for
months, with its
most recent New York
statewide poll
showing Democratic
approval of the
president down from
86 percent in April
to 67 percent.
Greenberg says that
though the polling’s
made clear that
Obama’s never going
to win back the
Republicans who were
with him on Election
Day 2008 ― or at
least supportive in
the months after ―
the real erosion has
been within his own
party.
“Where he’s lost his
support in New York
is among the
Democrats,”
Greenberg said.
“That’s more
startling than the
overall.”
Across the country
in California, which
hasn’t voted for a
Republican
presidential nominee
for more than 20
years, the numbers
reflect the same
trend: Obama’s
approval rating, at
61 percent a year
ago, is down t0 50
percent, according
to a Sept. 7
University of
Southern
California/L.A.
Times poll.
And California’s
Field Poll reported
Wednesday that, for
the first time since
Obama took office,
fewer than half of
state voters
approved of his
overall performance.
In March 2009, 65
percent approved of
his job was doing as
president and just
21 percent
disapproved. By
September 2011, just
46 percent approved
while 44 percent
disapproved.
Gauging the extent
of the blue state
blues is difficult ―
many solidly
Democratic states
haven’t been
surveyed recently.
But in August,
Quinnipiac
University conducted
a pair of polls in
New York and New
Jersey that showed
the president
dropping by
double-digits since
June, leaving him at
a 45 percent
approval and 49
percent disapproval
rate in New York and
a 44 percent
approval and 52
percent disapproval
across the river.
Given the
overwhelmingly
Democratic
electorate in these
states, Quinnipiac
polling director
Mickey Carroll said
he thinks those
numbers could serve
as proxies for the
feelings of core
Obama voters far
from the Hudson.
“When New York and
New Jersey, where he
ought to be doing
much better, are
this low,” Carroll
said, “that spreads
out: throw a rock in
the water and the
ripples go out ―
it’s not good.”
The ripples have
already hit both
coasts, at least
according to an
automated SurveyUSA
poll of Oregonians
in August. Though
the state is very
down on Republican
Rick Perry ― he has
a 16-29 percent
favorable-unfavorable
― they’re not
especially thrilled
with Obama. In a
state where the
president won with
nearly 57 percent of
the vote in 2008,
he’s down to just a
41 percent favorable
rating, with more
voters ― 45 percent
― rating him
unfavorably.
The phenomenon is
present even in
Vermont, every cycle
among the first
states called for
the Democratic
presidential nominee
on election night.
Voters there ― a
place which
delivered 67 percent
of its vote to Obama
in 2008 ― gave the
president an
approval rating of
only 53 percent in a
mid-August Public
Policy Polling
survey.
PPP’s Tom Jensen
said he can already
see base troubles
putting the
president on defense
in several less
reliably Democratic
states that Obama
won by double digits
in 2008.
“If you have to
fight to keep
Wisconsin, you’re
not going to be
really playing in
Georgia, Arizona and
Indiana,” Jensen
said, referring to
three
Republican-leaning
states where
Democrats have at
times expressed
optimism about
Obama’s chances
there.
Obama’s numbers have
been ticking
downward for months.
Even before this
summer’s toxic
combination of the
debt ceiling fight,
the S&P ratings
downgrade and
growing impatience
with the lack of
progress on
unemployment, his
approval was above
50 percent in just
16 states, according
to the aggregated
daily tracking data
Gallup released in
August.
His best numbers,
naturally, were in
the bluest states.
But he was suffering
there too, including
in his home state of
Hawaii, where he was
at 56 percent
(compared to 71
percent n 2009), and
Illinois, where now
only 54 percent of
the people who sent
him to the Senate
approve of the job
he’s doing in the
White House
(compared to 65
percent in 2009).
The only place he
remains wildly
popular is in his
current hometown ―
Washington, D.C.
residents approved
of him an average of
83 percent.
Meanwhile, in
Washington state,
Obama just cracked
50 percent.
The diagnosis for
the blue state
blues: the economy,
frustration with
partisan gridlock
inside the Beltway,
a general
anti-establishment
feeling and other
factors that are
largely beyond the
president’s control
that are bringing
everyone down. But
for the base,
there’s also the
succession of
heartbreaks, with
the belief that
Obama did not enough
on health care, the
stimulus, gay rights
and the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, and
anything at all on
immigration reform
and the rest of the
liberal wish list
Obama promised he’d
get to in the Oval
Office.
Whether split out by
race, age or
anything else, just
about every
cross-tab tells the
same story: a good
portion of those who
danced in the
streets on election
night and stood for
hours in the cold on
the Mall for the
inauguration have
begun to wander
away.
“They’re pulling
back their
enthusiasm ― you can
see the Democratic
base is just not
that aroused,” said
Mark DiCamillo, the
director of the
Field Poll that
found Obama at
historic lows in
California this
week.
Most of all ― and
ominously for a
president who’s
hoping to hold off
the coming
Republican onslaught
by firing up his
base ― they just
want to see him
fight.
“They’re complaining
that Obama is all
rhetoric with no
follow through, he’s
not sticking to his
guns, he’s just not
winning any of the
debates in
Washington,”
DiCamillo said.
“That’s where the
frustration comes
from.”











