Bush Lingers in the Low 40s, Dems Maintain Ballot Edge
by Jonathan Singer, Fri Jan 27, 2006 at 01:33:48 PM EST
We in the MyDD community aren't the only ones with a poll in the news today. In fact, quite a few others have numbers available on the President (though none of them asked the tough questions in our poll, of course).
Presidential Approval
- Fox News: 41 percent approve, 51 percent disapprove
- Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg: 43 percent approve, 54 percent disapprove
- The New York Times/CBS News: 42 percent approve, 51 percent disapprove
- Fox News: 34 percent approve, 51 percent disapprove
- LAT/Bloomberg: 35 percent approve, 55 percent disapprove
- NYT/CBS News: 29 percent approve, 61 percent disapprove
- LAT/Bloomberg (If the elections for Congress were being held today, which party would you like to see win in your congressional district: the Democratic Party or the Republican Party?): 35 percent Republican, 47 percent Democrat
- NYT/CBS News (If the 2006 election for U.S. House of Representatives were being held today, would you vote for the Republican candidate or the Democratic candidate in your district?): 33 percent Republican, 43 percent Democrat
Looking at the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll, which breaks down the generic congressional ballot by party affiliation, the numbers come out as follows: Democrats would vote for the Democratic candidate by a 87 to 5 margin and Republicans would vote for the GOP candidate by a similar 83 to 9 margin. Independents, who have continuously been moving towards the Democrats on key policy positions over the past year or so, favor the Democrats by a mere 32 to 27 margin. There are still a lot of unaffiliated voters floating around out there to be picked up by either party, and unless the Democrats do a fairly good job of wooing these voters in the next ten months, they might see this generic advantage disappear.
In many ways, this mirrors the key problem faced by John Kerry throughout 2004. From the time he locked up the Democratic nomination in March through the first Tuesday in November, John Kerry hovered in the high 40s, never dipping too much, but never really surging either. Essentially, the 48 percent of voters who opposed President Bush in March 2004 remained opposed to him throughout the campaign season, their numbers neither enlarging or deteriorating significantly, and on election day, only 48 percent of voters marked their ballot for the Democrat.
One of my fears is that this situation will repeat itself this year, with the Democrats seeming to maintain a generic lead throughout the campaign only to see Republicans coalesce in November. Tempering this concern, at least to an extent, are three facts:
- Jack Abramoff, as well as the many other indicted and investigated Republicans across the country;
- That 2006 hosts a series of more than 500 elections for the Senate, the House and the Governorships, rather than one overarching campaign for the White House; and
- The lack of a Democratic bogeyman (Kerry scares conservatives a lot less as one of one hundred Senators than he does as a possible President).










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