Category Archives: Gallup Polls

Poll: 77 percent say Washington politics causing serious harm

Finally, someone asked the American people about the toxic politics going on in Washington.

The resounding answer should make pols and pundits alike take notice and work at fixing the problem…asap.

The Hill

A vast majority of Americans worry that politics in Washington is causing serious harm to the country, according to a new Gallup survey released Monday.

Of those surveyed, 77 percent said the way politics works is causing the nation serious harm, versus just 19 percent who say the effects were not serious. Republicans were most pessimistic, with 87 percent arguing federal politics was damaging the country. But support for the sentiment was broad — 79 percent of independents and 68 percent of Democrats responded in the same way.

“The finding that most Americans think politics are hurting the country fits with a number of additional measures showing that Americans hold the federal government in general and Congress in particular — the main instruments of how American politics work — in low regard,” said Gallup’s Frank Newport in a release.

“The 19 percent of Americans who do not feel negatively about the way politics are being handled is quite close to Congress’ current 18 percent job approval rating,” he added. “Confidence in Congress as an institution — the percentage with a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in it — is at 13 percent, and 10 percent and 14 percent of Americans rate the honesty and ethics of members of Congress and senators, respectively, as high or very high.”

But despite a gloomy opinion of Congress and politics, Americans remain optimistic about the future. Of those surveyed, 52 percent said they believed the way politics worked would improve in Washington over the next 10 years.

That optimism is driven primarily by Democrats, who believed in a better coming decade by a 63-34 percent margin. By contrast, 56 percent of Republicans were pessimistic, believing politics would get worse over the next 10 years. Young respondents were the most likely to be optimistic, with 55 percent of those between 18 and 29 years old hopeful about the future. Older voters were more evenly split on whether things would improve.

 

2 Comments

Filed under Executive Branch, Gallup Polls, United States Congress, United States Senate

Obama Job Approval Reaches 50% for First Time Since Spring

This can’t be good news for the incoming GOP led Congress…LOL!

Gallup

Obama Job Approval Reaches 50% for First Time Since Spring

Barack Obama averaged 50% job approval in the most recent three days of Gallup Daily tracking, the first time his rating has reached that mark since the Memorial Day holiday last year.
 
 
Americans enter the new year with considerably more optimism than pessimism about what it may bring: 58% say 2011 will be better than 2010, 20% say 2011 will be worse, and 21% say it will be the same.

Looking at 2011 Economy, Optimists Double Pessimists

Twice as many Americans think the U.S. economy will be better rather than worse in 2011. Forty-four percent think their personal financial situations will be better this year than in 2010.
 

Comments Off

Filed under Economy, Financial Crisis, Gallup Polls, Obama Administration, Obama Approval Rating, Obama Policy, Obama Presidency, Politics, Poll, President Barack Obama

Gallup poll “shock” part two: Dems lead generic

Citizens registered as an Independent, Democra...

Image via Wikipedia

 

Well golly gee!  I gotta say, Kos’ headline is a wee bit misleading.  The Dems are now leading by one point in the Gallup “generic” poll in which an unnamed Dem and an unnamed Republican are the topic for a few questions about the 2010 mid-term elections.  More to follow: 

Daily Kos 

Gallup’s latest national poll of registered voters, hot off the press: 

Generic Ballot Virtually Tied: Democrats 46%, Republicans 45% 

PRINCETON, NJ — Gallup’s generic ballot for Congress for the week of Sept. 13-19 shows a 46% Democratic and 45% Republican split in registered voters’ preferences for the midterm congressional elections. It is the second week out of the last three in which the two parties have been virtually tied. 

Gallup’s been all over the map this cycle and this is not a poll of likely voters, so don’t start preparing a victory parade just yet. However, according to their own numbers, in August the GOP had a six point advantage in interviews conducted with 7,025 respondents. So far in September, that advantage has shrunk to one point based on 5,625 surveys. 

Although these numbers are by no means the final word, they offer at least some sign that Democratic fortunes may be improving. The timing actually makes sense given that President Obama kicked off the campaign on Labor Day and the GOP has been on defensive over their opposition to his tax cut plan. And don’t forget that the GOP has marched off the edge of the cliff with the nomination of Christine O’Donnell in Delaware and Joe Miller in Alaska. 

Gallup isn’t alone in showing a narrowing generic: since August, Pollster.com shows a dramatically narrowing GOP lead (and it’s even closer if you exclude Rasmussen). (Update: Since posting this, Rasmussen’s latest poll caused the first graph to show a steady GOP lead. However, the generic ballot is now tied among all phone-based pollsters not named Rasmussen.) At the very least, these numbers should remind Dems (particularly those in Congress who want to punt on the tax cut issue) that they shouldn’t give up now. We may not be favorites, but we’re still in the game. 

Comments Off

Filed under Gallup Polls

Gallup – Ooops!

 

The Field - Al Giordano

The Gallup polling company, which set off a week’s media cycle of Chicken Little squawking among Democrats – and triumphant drape-measuring by Republicans – in the US with its August 30 declarations about a supposedly “historic” advantage for the latter party in the upcoming Congressional midterm elections, is now walking it back.

The August 30 tracking poll – picked up almost universally by political pundits and bloggers as the supposed narrative for 2010 – showed Republicans with a ten percentage point lead on the generic question of which party voters will vote into Congress. The narrative was: This year we’re gonna party like its 1994! I, and others, tried to explain at the moment that the poll looked and smelled like an “outlier,” divergent with the results of the aggregate of fresh polling data available. But pundits are pundits and chickens are little on any day of the year, and so they had quite the week in the henhouse.

Well, lo’ and behold, some seemed to forget that those numbers were from a tracking poll, which means another one would come out in a week and make the last one yesterday’s news. And guess what? Today’s Gallup tracking poll on the generic Congressional ballot suggests an abrupt turnaround, with party preferences dead even at 46 percent apiece.

[...]

By now the expectations have risen so high among Republicans that if they fall short of taking back control of Congress the heads will be rolling on their side of the aisle, with finger pointing and blame game galore. It doesn’t take a degree in political science to know who will be their scapegoat: GOP chairman Michael Steele. (Kids, can any of you explain to the class why it will be him?)       Continue reading…

Comments Off

Filed under Gallup Polls, Republican House Takeover, Republicans