National Journal
 
Republicans’ Hatred of Obama Blinds Them to  Public Disinterest in Scandals
Republicans are so focused on their bitter  battles against Obama, they can’
t see how little impact the “scandals” have had  on public opinion.

 
By _Charlie  Cook_ (http://www.nationaljournal.com/reporters/bio/2)   
Updated: May 21, 2013 

 
Red-faced Republicans, circling and preparing to pounce on a  second-term 
Democratic president they loathe, do not respect, and certainly do  not fear. 
Sound familiar? Perhaps reminiscent of Bill Clinton’s second term,  after 
the Monica Lewinsky story broke? During that time, Republicans became so  
consumed by their hatred of Clinton and their conviction that this event would  
bring him down that they convinced themselves the rest of the country was 
just  as outraged by his behavior as they were. By the way, what was Clinton’
s lowest  Gallup job-approval rating in his second term, throughout the 
travails of  investigations and impeachment? It was 53 percent. The 
conservative 
echo machine  had worked itself into such a frenzy, the GOP didn’t realize 
that the outrage  was largely confined to the ranks of those who never voted 
for Clinton  anyway. 
These days, the country is even more polarized, and the  conservative echo 
chamber is louder than ever before. Many conservatives made it  all the way 
to Election Day last November unaware that their White House nominee  was 
falling short. How could Mitt Romney possibly lose when everyone they knew  
was voting for him? Except that he did lose, and it wasn’t even a very close  
race. Five other post-World War II presidential elections had closer  
outcomes. 
The simple fact is that although the Republican sharks are  circling, at 
least so far, there isn’t a trace of blood in the water. A new  CNN/ORC survey 
of 923 Americans this past Friday and Saturday, May 17-18, pegged  Obama’s 
job-approval rating at 53 percent, up a statistically insignificant 2  
points since their last poll, April 5-7, which was taken before the Benghazi,  
IRS, and AP-wiretap stories came to dominate the news and congressional 
hearing  rooms. His disapproval rating was down 2 points since that last 
survey. 
In Gallup’s tracking poll, Obama’s average job-approval rating  so far 
this year is 50 percent. For this past week, May 13-19, his average was  49 
percent, the same as the week before. The most recent three-day moving  
average, through Sunday, May 19, was also 49 percent. Over the past two weeks,  
even as these three stories/scandals have dominated the news, they have had  
precisely zero effect on the president’s job-approval numbers. His ratings are 
 still bouncing around in the same narrow range they have been for weeks. 
Maybe that will change. Maybe these allegations will start  getting 
traction with voters. But it might just be that Americans are more  focused on 
an 
economy that is gradually coming out of the longest and deepest  economic 
downturn since the Great Depression. Most economists say the current  quarter 
will show a slowdown in economic growth from the first quarter’s 2.5  percent 
pace, but they expect the economy to be stronger in the second half of  
this year. People may be encouraged by housing prices rising and the stock  
market setting record highs—and their retirement accounts may actually be  
looking better. The University of Michigan’s widely watched Consumer Sentiment  
Index is at the highest level since 2007, before the recession. The 
Conference  Board’s more volatile Consumer Confidence Index is also generally 
moving 
up,  although it isn’t at the record level of the Michigan index. The 
National  Federation of Independent Business’s Index of Small Business 
Optimism, 
which  took a deep plunge after the election, increased last month and is on 
an upward  trend since the beginning of the year. Maybe the people and 
businesses polled  have written off Washington as a political cesspool, and so 
these stories don’t  affect them much. Perhaps they see this town as a place 
that can’t seem to get  anything right. 
One wonders how long Republicans are going to bark up this  tree, perhaps 
the wrong tree, while they ignore their own party’s problems,  which were 
shown to be profound in the most recent elections. Clearly none of  these 
recent issues has had a real impact on voters yet. Republicans seem to be  
betting everything on them, just as they did in 1998—about which even Newt  
Gingrich (who was House speaker that year) commented recently to NPR, “I think  
we 
overreached in ’98.” 
Republicans and conservatives who are so consumed by these  “scandals” 
should ask themselves why, despite wall-to-wall media attention and  the 
constant focus inside the Beltway—some are even talking about grounds for  
impeachment—Obama’s job-approval needle hasn’t moved. The CNN/ORC poll suggests 
 
that people are aware of and watching the news, but they aren’t reacting, at  
least not yet. Clearly Republicans hope the public will begin to respond. 
But at  what point do they decide that maybe voters might be more interested 
in other  issues or worries than about politicians on one side pointing 
fingers and  throwing allegations at those on the other side? At what point 
might the GOP  conclude that it is just digging the hole a little  deeper?

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to