Author Topic: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer  (Read 723 times)

Dos Equis

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More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« on: October 21, 2010, 05:47:13 PM »
I agree with the majority. 

More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
By: CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

(CNN) – President Obama is busy trying to convince voters that Democratic incumbents deserve to keep their jobs, but a new poll out Thursday suggests a majority of Americans doesn’t think he deserves to keep his.

According to the survey from Gallup, only 39 percent of Americans say the president deserves to be re-elected while 54 percent think he should join the ill-fated ranks of one-term presidents.

Those numbers may be an ominous sign for the White House, which is expected to step up its re-election efforts shortly after the midterm election season is over.

But similar Gallup polling of past presidents suggests a lot can happen in two years to change public perception. After all, at this point in 2002, 62 percent of Americans said former President George Bush deserved reelection as the country resoundingly unified around the president in the months following the September 11 attacks.

But two years later, amid a war that was growing increasingly unpopular, Bush eked out only a narrow victory over Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry.

And at this time in 1994 – amid a struggling economy and legislative failures - only 38 percent of Americans said former President Bill Clinton deserved a second term. Clinton of course went on to win re-election easily two years later.
Moreover, in 1990, former President George H.W. Bush's reelection seemed all but certain given his high approvals at that time.
The latest Gallup poll surveyed 1,029 adults by telephone from October 14 to 17 and carries a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll in August found similar numbers for the president when it comes to 2012: against an unnamed Republican candidate, that poll had the president losing by 5 points 50-45 percent.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/10/21/trending-more-than-half-thinks-obama-a-one-termer/#more-129982


Skip8282

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2010, 07:23:59 PM »
He's pretty slick, I wouldn't put it past him to get a 2nd term.  Let's see how the economy is in 2011.

MM2K

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #2 on: October 21, 2010, 08:39:06 PM »
The only thing that can save him are the minorities. If he wins the same percentage of minorities that he won in 2008, he can badly lose the white vote and still win the presidency. Its pretty pathetic, but Im increasingly beginning to believe that is why he is sueing Arizona and talking about the hip hop artists on his I phone.

Hugh Hewitt explains why Obama wont have the same good fate that Clinton had in this essay.

OBAMA'S CNBC TOWNHALL WAS A DISASTER
by Hugh Hewitt

President Obama's CNBC "townhall" was a disaster for the White House message machine, so much so you have to wonder if the president isn't suggesting that Robert Gibbs leave along with Rahm and Larry.

Lost among the coverage given to the "I'm exhausted" exchange between the president and Velma Hart was a stunner from the president that went this way:

"The rhetoric and the politicizing of so many decisions that are out there has to be toned down. We've got to get back to working together. And this is part of my job as leader. It's not just a matter of implementing good policies, but also setting a better tone so that everybody feels like we can start cooperating again instead of going at loggerheads all the time."

Coming from President "I Won, You Lost" just as Harry Reid ginned up his re-election campaign by bringing before the Senate for certain defeat the so-called "Dream Act," the so called "Disclose Act," and an attempt to repeal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" months before the Pentagon's review of that proposed repeal is completed or circulated for comment is too much even for cynics to accept as garden variety White House hypocrisy. President Obama used his enormous majorities to jam through a wildly wasteful "stimulus" and the wildly unpopular Obamacare, but now that he is on the brink of losing those majorities, he wants a new era of cooperation.

Except in the Senate. Or the House. Or when he is off stage and demanding of his generals a slow walk to defeat in Afghanistan and calculating that we could absorb another major terrorist attack, if Bob Woodward is to be believed.

The training wheels have come off, and not even the combined effort of all the Beltway media to keep the president on his bike and moving forward is working. The economic policy "team" is scattering like a too-popular-too-soon boy band after a second album, and the White House's "enforcer" Rahm wants out to run the efficient-and-thoughtful-by-comparison city bureaucracy of Chicago.

And we aren't even at the halfway point of the term yet.

This isn't a rerun of the Clinton knock-down and recovery. Clinton never swerved so far to the left, didn't actually burden the economy with Hillary-care and, while he raised taxes, he also got his policy in place and left it there, providing predictability at the start of the dot-com boom.

By contrast, Obama has thrown massive uncertainty on to every employer's balance sheet and has loosed the EPA to try and regulate carbon emissions on every manufacturer in the land. Even if there was a magical second dot-com boom ahead, the president has already spent all the tax revenues it would generate.

The mismanagement of everything is now being detailed in the first wave of insider books, and the rudely-exiled insiders are now sources-in-waiting for when their successors come up short. Even the dutiful MSNBCers cannot be expected to stay on board a quickly sinking ship much longer.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee hopes to divert attention from the chaos that is the Obama Administration with ads charging GOP candidates with secret plots to destroy Social Security. This is the political equivalent of showing Reefer Madness to 9th graders in 2010. Is there a single voter who believes such nonsense for even a minute or is it just the product of a weariness so profound that not even paid operatives can be expected to try and find something from the past 22 months worth selling to the public as an achievement.

Really, there is nothing to run on? Nothing at all?

No, there isn't. The deep gloom that has settled on the country is only in part economic. Hard times have come and gone before, but in the modern networked age never has so obviously a clueless set of leaders been so completely and obviously inept, tone deaf and at the same time inarticulate. President Bush wasn't a great communicator, but he limited the damage he did to his own case by not conducting townhalls built around calls for civility while the brass knuckles were still on the fist.

The anti-Obama tsunami seems to be growing, and in unexpected places like New York and West Virginia. The Congress adds fuel to the fire every time it meets, and the president is now on notice that even hand-picked audiences cannot avoid embarrassing him. His cheerleaders want him off the teleprompter until they hear him off the teleprompter.

And his back-up act is Joe Biden.

Somewhere some Democrats have to be talking about Hillary. A party, and a country, can only take so much.
Jan. Jobs: 36,000!!

Danny

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #3 on: October 21, 2010, 08:58:32 PM »
The only thing that can save him are the minorities is Sarah Palin

fixed...LOL
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24KT

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #4 on: October 24, 2010, 03:39:59 AM »
I agree with the majority. 

More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
By: CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

We thought the same thing about George Bush too, ...and look what happened there.  :-\
w

Soul Crusher

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #5 on: October 24, 2010, 05:38:30 AM »
We thought the same thing about George Bush too, ...and look what happened there.  :-\

John Kerry happened. 

Dos Equis

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #6 on: October 24, 2010, 07:43:01 AM »
We thought the same thing about George Bush too, ...and look what happened there.  :-\

Who is "we"?

MM2K

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Re: More than half thinks Obama a one-termer
« Reply #7 on: October 24, 2010, 09:58:54 PM »
We thought the same thing about George Bush too, ...and look what happened there.  :-\

When the economy started coming back in 2003, George Bush was pretty much a shoe in for re-election, that is until Iraq blew up in our face in April of 2004.
Jan. Jobs: 36,000!!