Dont Start Planning Obama Inauguration Yet

From The Rothenberg Political Report width=227While few are saying it openly many I talk with sound as if there is no need to wait until November 2012 to declare President Barack Obama winner of a second term. Given the killing of Osama bin Laden the expected $1 billion war chest of the presidents re-election campaign the less-than-intimidating Republican presidential field and the controversial GOP Congressional initiative proposing substantial changes in Medicare and Social Security it isnt surprising that many are skeptical of GOP prospects. But there are so many dark clouds on the horizon that the president is only an uncomfortably slight favorite for a second term as we enter the spring. Until the news of bin Ladens death Obamas job approval numbers looked weak. They are likely to return to those levels over the next few months unless other good news improves the publics underlying mood of pessimism. Surveys pollsters like to say are mere snapshots of public opinion and polling conducted immediately after a major news event usually is nothing more than a photograph of the publics reaction to that event whether good or bad. As we all expected the president has received a nice bump after the bin Laden news but when Americans turn their attention back toward the underlying state of the nation the presidents job approval numbers will slide back to about where they were before May 1. Actually this same process already happened at the end of 2010 and early in 2011. Obamas job approval ratings according to Gallup shot up to 51 percent approve/41 percent disapprove in mid-January after the successes of the lame-duck session of Congress and the presidents performance following the Tucson Ariz. shootings on Jan. 8. But by the end of April Obamas ratings had fallen back to 45 percent approve/47 percent disapprove almost right where they were in late October 2010. Other polls confirmed the trend. The CBS/New York Times poll found the presidents January job rating of 49 percent approve/39 percent disapprove slipping to 46 percent approve/45 percent disapprove in mid-April while the ABC/Washington Post survey showed his 54 percent approve/43 percent disapprove ratings in mid-January plunging to 47 percent approve/50 percent in mid-April. These dips werent unexpected and I wrote in this space back in late January why the presidents mid-January standing in the polls might be nothing more than a bear market rally" for him rather than a fundamental shift in voter sentiment about his presidency. The bubble created by the accomplishments of the lame-duck session and the sense of national unity following the Tucson shootings burst because the nations fundamentals remained unchanged. So as soon as people refocused on the nations challenges (e.g. rising gas prices and the deficit) the presidents poll numbers returned roughly to where they had been around Election Day. Thats almost certainly going to happen again unless of course there is more good news economic news around the corner. Unfortunately for the White House an unemployment rate of 9 percent and high gas prices dont quality as good news. Gallups Jeffrey Jones suggests that Obamas 10th quarter in office could be a telling sign for his re-election chances" which at the very least suggests that Jones believes the presidents prospects for a second term are uncertain. The right direction/wrong track numbers have been equally bad. Depending on which polls you prefer one-quarter to one-third of Americans think the country is headed in the right direction. These numbers are much worse than the ones pollsters got during the mid-December to mid-February bubble and they are as bad or in most cases a few points worse than polls conducted in October. I looked at other survey data of course including Congress job rating and party identification but nothing suggests that Obamas re-election is at this point more than a jump ball. What about the thin GOP field and the map"? Yes the Republican field looks unimpressive overall. But its hard to measure up to a sitting president particularly one who is by any definition a historic figure with charisma and unmatched fundraising prowess. Still elections are often referendums not choices as we have seen recently. If voters want change they are inclined to look for something different. Democratic Congressional candidates were different in 2006 Obama was different in 2008 and Republican candidates were different in 2010. So assuming that voters feel next November as they do today about the president Republicans can win in 2012 if they succeed in making that election a referendum on Obamas performance in office and if they nominate a candidate who is broadly acceptable to the electorate even if he doesnt have all of Obamas skills and assets. (Obamas campaign of course will attempt to make the election a choice rather than a referendum if voters are unhappy with the president.) While the Republican field looks thin there are a number of candidates now in the race who pass the smell test" and could win if the electorates desire for change is strong enough next year assuming they run strong races. The presidential election map of 2012 says the same thing. There are probably six or eight true Tossups if we have a close presidential election next year. The list includes Colorado and Nevada in the West Virginia and North Carolina in the South and Ohio and Iowa in the Midwest. If you feel like adding a few other states possibly Florida and New Hampshire go ahead. Please dont add Indiana or Missouri both of which certainly lean Republican. If the president starts with 247 electoral votes and a credible GOP nominee starts with 191 the election will turn on eight states eight politically competitive states that can go either way depending on the overall dynamics of the political environment and of the election. By any definition that makes the presidential map definitely in play" at least at this point. Finally since nobody knows what sort of events will happen between now and the fall of 2012 its hard to know how the president and his Republican opposition will be affected by circumstances. The killing of bin Laden is obviously an asset for Obama and Im sure we will hear about it often during the campaign. But between now and the fall of 2012 many other developments will define our politics and our politicians. Given all of these considerations the 2012 Republican nomination looks more valuable than many people now seem to understand.
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
05.12.2025

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
05.06.2025
image
05.05.2025
ad-image