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Obama still popular despite weakening economy, employment
Denmark News.Net Friday 3rd July, 2009 (Jim Malone)
The U.S. jobless rate rose to 9.5 percent last month -- the highest figure in 26 years. In the short term, the jobs report is a political setback for President Barack Obama and his economic policies. But the latest opinion polls suggest the president continues to hold public support despite the weak economy.
President Obama acknowledged the disappointing jobs report at the White House, but quickly urged Americans to be patient as the country waits for the economy to improve.
"As I've said from the moment I walked into the door of this White House, it took years for us to get into this mess and it will take us more than a few months to turn it around," he said.
The modest increase in unemployment was higher than most experts had predicted, says economist Stuart Hoffman.
"The job market is still weak; it is still tough to find a job. Layoffs have slowed down. Not as many people are getting laid off, but there is still very little hiring," said Hoffman.
Despite the struggling economy, Mr. Obama can take a measure of solace from recent public opinion polls.
The latest survey from Quinnipiac University in Connecticut shows the public, for the most part, is staying behind the president despite the weak economy.
"What we have found is that President Obama is still quite popular with the American people. He has a 57 percent job approval rating, which is quite healthy. It's down a little bit since when he took office, obviously, but that is not terribly surprising," said Quinnipiac pollster Peter Brown.
In other recent polls, Mr. Obama's approval rating ranges from 56-65 percent, with disapproval ranging from 31-37 percent.
Quinnipiac pollster Peter Brown says his latest survey suggests that a number of people who had been reserving judgment about the president now disapprove of his job performance, in part because the economy remains sluggish. Brown says the president's approval ratings have dropped by 8-10 points among some key voting groups since the last poll in early June.
"And these are people and groups that disproportionately did not vote for him in November. We are talking about men, Republicans, evangelical white Christians and white Catholics. And so these people, who you would expect to not be supporters of the president based on history, have been giving him a tryout, so to speak, in their minds and they have decided he is not their cup of tea," he said.
Opposition Republicans are taking some of the credit for that drop in support for the president, and for growing public concern about the national debt and deficit spending.
Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele says the latest jobs report proves that the president's stimulus plan is not bringing about economic recovery.
It is a theme Republicans like House of Representatives Minority leader John Boehner have been sounding for weeks. "I think the question is: where are the jobs? We all remember the trillion dollar stimulus bill. Democrats promised it would be about jobs, jobs and jobs. And clearly, all it has turned into is about spending, spending and more spending," he said.
Republicans also have been arguing that it is time that voters hold President Obama responsible for the weak economy and stop blaming his predecessor, former President George Bush.
But pollster Peter Brown says that so far, Americans still seem to think the bulk of the responsibility for the economy rests with Mr. Bush, not President Obama.
"So far, he seems to be able to convince the American people that the economic problems they are facing were not his fault, but the result of his predecessor, and that is why his job approval rating is so high. When people start blaming the economic conditions on him, his job numbers will come down," said Brown. Email this story to a friend
Comments on this story
kawahchan 07-04-09, 11:59 AM |
Obama still popular despite weakening economy, employment
(R) 2012 DAN QUAYLE Presidential Coalition: Where is your backbone ? If a white need to knee in front of a FAKE black man Barack Hussein Obama to run a White House, these whites are dirt cheap !! We like to tell Obama and his so-called UC-Berkeley’s Macro Economics is that DON’T TRY TO MISUSING Obama’s so-called “Regulation” to fool American people, NO one owe the blacks and Latinos neither a life nor anything; DON’T create more national debts to every American household to burden. Be “REAL” to your own stomach.
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raquel jenae 07-04-09, 12:27 PM |
Reasons why he is still poupular
#1 he cares about every one not just the rich put the poor an middle class also
#2 i know alot of people who see change
#3 stop hatein hes trying to raise taxes on soda and stuff so he can get money to help people with health care an etc
#4 this economy wouldnt b any better is we had MACAINNN AN sHARHHHHHHPAILAINNNN
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waltky 07-05-09, 03:40 AM |
He gonna get one o' dem sick headaches if he don’t let up some...
:eek:
Colin Powell worries Obama tackling too much
4 July`09 WASHINGTON (AP) — Colin Powell worries that President Obama is trying to tackle too many big issues at one time and he offers this advice: take a hard look at costs and consider the additional red tape that will be created.
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“The right answer is, 'Give me a government that works,"' the former secretary of state said in a television interview to be aired Sunday. “Keep it as small as possible," added Powell, who said he has spoken recently with Obama and stays in touch with him. Powell, a Republican, endorsed Obama last year over the GOP presidential nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain. Obama wants to overhaul the health care system and take on climate change while also helping the country emerge from the recession.
“I think one of the cautions that has to be given to the president — and I’ve talked to some of his people about this — is that you can’t have so many things on the table that you can’t absorb it all. And we can’t pay for it all," Powell said. “And I never would have believed that we would have budgets that are running into the multi-trillions of dollars, and we are amassing a huge, huge national debt that, if we don’t pay for in our lifetime, our kids and grandkids and great grandchildren will have to pay for it."
It’s not a new theme for Powell. He complained about the government’s size and intrusiveness in his 1996 speech to the Republican National Convention. He said then that the nation no longer could afford more entitlements, higher taxes and more bureaucracy. In the interview with CNN’s “State of the Union” that is to air Sunday, Powell said he hasn’t changed his mind.
“Keep it as small as possible. Keep the tax burden on the American people as small as possible, but at the same time, have government that is solving the problems of the people," he said. He said Obama “has to start really taking a very, very hard look at what the cost of all this is. And, how much additional bureaucracy and will it be effective bureaucracy." CNN released excerpts of the interview in advance of the broadcast.
[url=http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2009-07-04-powell-obama_N.htm?csp=24&RM_Exclude=Juno: Source[/url]
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