AMBUSH AT APPROVAL GAP – AT 8:17 A.M. ET: Gallup is reporting another new record for President Obama, not the kind he will post on the Oval Office wall:
PRINCETON, NJ -- The 65 percentage-point gap between Democrats' (88%) and Republicans' (23%) average job approval ratings for Barack Obama is easily the largest for any president in his first year in office, greatly exceeding the prior high of 52 points for Bill Clinton.
My question is this: Precisely what is it that Democrats approve of? You get the sense that this is all personal.
Overall, Obama averaged 57% job approval among all Americans from his inauguration to the end of his first full year on Jan. 19. He came into office seeking to unite the country, and his initial approval ratings ranked among the best for post-World War II presidents, including an average of 41% approval from Republicans in his first week in office. But he quickly lost most of his Republican support, with his approval rating among Republicans dropping below 30% in mid-February and below 20% in August. Throughout the year, his approval rating among Democrats exceeded 80%, and it showed little decline even as his overall approval rating fell from the mid-60s to roughly 50%.
And...
In fact, his 88% average approval rating from his own party's supporters is exceeded only by George W. Bush's 92% during Bush's first year in office. Obama's 23% approval among supporters of the opposition party matches Bill Clinton's for the lowest for a first-year president. But Clinton was less popular among Democrats than Obama has been to date, making Obama's ratings more polarized.
COMMENT: The only thing that can possibly change here is that Dems might start losing faith. I can't imagine moderate Democrats continuing to support this president.
The figures are not only startling, they're discouraging. This kind of polarization is dangerous for the country, and reflects a failure of leadership.
The survey did not measure support for Obama among independents, which has dropped dramatically, and which will make him a one-term president if there are no corrections.
January 25, 2010 |