THE COOK REPORT
Underwater 
President Obama will struggle to win reelection if his  approval rating 
doesn’t rise.

 
 
(http://www.nationaljournal.com/columns/cook-report/the-cook-report-obama-underwater-20111027#)
  
(http://www.nationaljournal.com/columns/cook-report/the-cook-report-obama-underwater-20111027#)
  
(http://www.nationaljournal.com/columns/cook-report/the-cook-report-obama-underwater-20111027#)
  
(http://www.nationaljournal.com/columns/cook-report/the-cook-report-obama-underwater-201
11027?print=true)  
(http://www.nationaljournal.com/columns/cook-report/the-cook-report-obama-underwater-20111027#)
  


Updated: October 28,  2011

 
With the 2012 presidential general election just a year away,  it’s a good 
time to look at the national polling and talk about the state of  play. 
Obviously, we have to make allowances for changing circumstances and  
unexpected 
events. 
The best barometer of how a president is going to fare is his  approval 
rating, which starts taking on predictive value about a year out. As  each 
month goes by, the rating becomes a better indicator of the eventual  results. 
Presidents with approval numbers above 48 to 50 percent in the Gallup  Poll 
win reelection. Those with approval ratings below that level usually lose.  
If voters don’t approve of the job you are doing after four years in office,  
they usually don’t vote for you. Of course, a candidate can win the popular 
vote  and still lose the Electoral College. It happened to Samuel Tilden in 
1876,  Grover Cleveland in 1888, and Al Gore in 2000. But the popular votes 
and the  Electoral College numbers usually come down on the same side. 
In his 11th and most recent quarter in office (July 20-Oct.  19), President 
Obama averaged a 41 percent approval rating among registered  voters, 
according to Gallup. His average for the month of September was the  same. For 
the week of Oct. 17-23, the president’s approval was 41 percent with a  
disapproval rating of 51 percent. It’s worth noting that in the Oct. 17-23  
aggregation of Gallup tracking, Obama’s job-approval rating among independents  
was only 38 percent. This was a group he carried by 8 percentage points over  
John McCain in 2008, 52 percent to 44 percent. Among “pure” independents, 
those  who don’t lean toward either party when pushed, the president’s 
approval rating  was 32 percent. 
Focusing on the big picture and that target of  48 to 50 percent among the 
total electorate, if Obama is to win in 2012, he  needs to raise his 
approval rating at least 7 to 9 points. (Obama got some good  news on Wednesday 
when the CBS/New York Times poll,  conducted Oct. 19-24, pegged his approval 
rating at 46 percent—closer to his  target.) 
Another way to look at the race is to compare  how Obama matches up against 
a generic Republican candidate. The theory is that  a president is 
well-known and well defined, but, at least early on, voters may  not have a 
strong 
impression of the candidates on the other side. In the latest  Gallup generic 
matchup, taken Oct. 6-9 among registered voters, respondents gave  an 
unnamed Republican 46 percent of the vote; Obama was 8 points back at 38  
percent. When undecided voters were “pushed,” or asked if they leaned one way 
or  
the other, the GOP margin was still 8 percentage points; the generic 
Republican  candidate pulled 50 percent and Obama received 42 percent. When 
Democratic  pollster Peter Hart and Republican pollster Bill McInturff tested 
this 
question  in the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll taken Oct. 6-10,  Obama 
led by a statistically insignificant 2 points, 44 percent to 42  percent. 
Then comes the more traditional named ballot  test. In the most recent 
Gallup/USA Today matchup of  Obama against former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt 
Romney, the apparent front-runner  for the Republican nomination and by most 
accounts the most formidable of the  GOP candidates, Romney held a 
statistically 
insignificant 2-point lead, 49  percent to 47 percent. In the Greenberg poll 
among likely voters, the race was  tied at 45 percent each. The NBC/WSJ 
survey put Obama  ahead of Romney by 2 points, 46 percent to 44 percent. A Pew 
Research poll in  late September-early October came up with 48 percent for 
each man. A  late-September Fox News poll had Obama up by 3 points, 45 
percent to 42 percent.  A similarly timed CNN survey showed Obama up by 1 
point, 
49 percent to 48  percent. 
If Republicans go with someone other than Romney, the key  question will be 
whether that candidate can compete as well among those  independent voters 
who live between the two partisan 40-yard lines. None of the  other major 
contenders at this point appears likely to meet that test. The GOP’s  risk is 
that although business executive Herman Cain or Texas Gov. Rick Perry  are 
closer to the current ideological center of the GOP, their ability to  
compete for those independents is highly questionable. With the Republican  
center 
having moved considerably to the right in recent years, Romney’s  challenge 
is more among conservatives in his own party than among independent  
voters. 
These numbers certainly don’t show Obama’s reelection fortunes  as 
hopeless, but they paint a very challenging situation. If events and the  state 
of 
the economy don’t change enough to raise his approval rating and his  
chances of winning an election that is framed as a referendum on his tenure, he 
 
will have to try to turn the contest into a choice between him and the GOP  
nominee. That will be easier if Republicans nominate an ideologue (and this  
still might be possible in a matchup with Romney). Recall the 2004 
Bush-Cheney  reelection campaign when it turned Democratic nominee John Kerry 
into an 
 ideological weathervane, an unacceptable choice. 
As in 2008, the Obama campaign will have a highly organized and  effective 
voter-identification and -turnout operation, but the president still  needs 
to get his approval rating up to, or at least much closer to, that  
reelection threshold of about 50 percent. 
This article appeared in the  Saturday, October 29, 2011 edition of 
National  Journal

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