Showing posts with label State of the Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State of the Union. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

Two polls show modest gains for Obama following State of the Union address

READ FULL STORY HERE
Fresh off his State of the Union address last week President Barack Obama has made a modest improvement with voters according to two major polls.

Gallup currently shows the President scoring a 50% approval rating from American adults, the first time he has reached the 50% mark in eleven days. Prior to the State of the Union Obama was at a less than desirable 47% average. Although this is not the first poll taken since his speech last week the three-point “bounce” measured falls in-line with Gallup’s assertion that President’s generally see little impact from their big national addresses. The topic was covered with greater depth in an
article last week.
Rasmussen Reports hails the recent State of the Union address as giving the President a “significant bounce” meanwhile. The polling methodology used by Rasmussen differs somewhat from that of Gallup. First off Rasmussen tracks “likely” voters instead of using a more general pool of nationwide adults to sample like Gallup. Secondly while they both show general approval ratings Rasmussen places a greater emphasis on those who “strongly” approve or disapprove and their net approval index rating reflects that data.

President Obama has struggled for months in the area of strong support against strong opposition according to Rasmussen, but his most recent approval measured at a negative four-percent is the best approval index achieved in over seven-months. Obama’s overall approval rating stands at 49%, down a point from yesterday. The number of those strongly approving of his job performance has shot up eight-points to 35% however. 39% of likely voters still disapprove of the President but the number that do so strongly has decreased by three-points since before his speech last Wednesday night.

Since the beginning of the New Year Gallup has measured President Obama’s approval rating between 47-52% every day. Rasmussen meanwhile has not measured the level of strong opinions in the plus column since last June when Obama was at +2% for the month. The President’s numbers bottomed out in December with a net approval index of -15%. For the now completed month of January Rasmussen tracked a modest up tick of one-percentage point (-14%) for Obama, still far below his peak rating of +23% for the month he entered office last January.

The most recent poll from CBS News conducted a week before the State of the Union address gave the President a 50% approval and 40% disapproval rating amongst adults. CBS also polled on the speech itself and found positive feedback from 83% of viewers on Obama’s performance. More polling from other organizations, perhaps to be released in the coming days, is welcomed if we are to give proper weight and perspective to recent surveys from Gallup and Rasmussen. It will also be worth focusing on those specific pollsters to see if the modest bump the President received from Gallup and the more significant one being measured by Rasmussen is simply the result of statistical noise, a blip on the radar, or part of a growing trend.


PHOTO CREDIT: ASSOCIATED PRESS / NICK WASS

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Poll: State of the Union rarely has meaningful effect on Presidential support

READ FULL STORY HERE
President Obama will address the nation tonight in his first State of the Union speech. Many political observers have suggested it critical that the President deliver a populist message of broad themes to reverse what has been at best a shaky past several months of legislation.

According to a recent Gallup analysis however history suggests the White House should not expect much of a post-speech bounce in the polls from the Commander in Chief’s address. In fact there have been more instances of a net loss in approval ratings than substantive gains for Presidents.

Tracking the pre and post-address job approval of each President since Jimmy Carter Gallup finds a mixed bag. Of the 27-speeches given since Carter’s first State of the Union in 1978 a total of fourteen have indicated a modest decline in a Presidents approval, three times there has been no loss or gain and just ten times a bump in popularity has been found. Overall Carter, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush all lost an average of one-percentage point after their national addresses and George H.W. Bush lost an average of four points. Only Bill Clinton, noted for skillful oratory, typically saw a bounce (3%) in his job approval following the State of the Union.

Even Clinton’s success after giving the big speech each year was decidedly uneven. The first Gallup polls taken after his State of the Union address in February of 1997 showed a decline of three-percentage points in his popularity. He also lost a point after his final speech in January of 2000 and remained unfazed as a virtual lame duck President a year earlier in 1999. Clinton’s greatest success came in 1998. Already polling strong at 59% the President offered up a strongly positive message that January touting a balanced federal budget and an economy at record strength. He made an impressive ten-point jump to 69% in the subsequent poll taken days after his address.

Clinton’s 1996 speech that unofficially kicked off his reelection campaign was also well received. Earning him a six-point bounce from a struggling 46% to a positive 52% approval the President rode his newfound popularity to an easy win in the fall. Other President’s have been less fortunate however.

Jimmy Carter dipped by three-points from 55% to 52% after his first State of the Union address in 1978. Embroiled in political controversies in 1987 President Reagan’s speech that year lost him five-points and dropped his approval rating down to 43%. Reagan also lost some clout two years earlier. Fresh off a landslide victory for reelection that previous November the “Great Communicator” never the less dipped by four-points from 64% to 60% post-speech. George H.W. Bush lost seven-points in early-1990 down from a lofty 80%. However two Gallup polls taken at that time were spread out by well over a month and perhaps included other factors helping to explain the sudden drop.

The State of the Union was both a blessing and a curse for George W. Bush depending on the year of the speech. His strongest performance came in 2005 after a reelection victory in the fall and the foreign policy success of the Iraqi elections taking place that January. Bush gained six-points pushing his approval rating up to 57%. Only modest gains or drops were experienced after addresses to the nation in 2002, ’03, ’06 and ’08. In two instances however Bush lost notable clout amongst voters. His 2004 speech not only contributed to a four-point drop but sent his approval ratings under the majority level (49%). Similarly in 2007 Bush went from bad (36%), to worse (32%) almost immediately after the State of the Union.

Although this will be his first State of the Union President Obama has already addressed Congress twice in joint sessions. In late-February of this year Obama rebounded from his first approval ratings dip to score an impressive eight-point bounce up to 67% following a speech focusing on his economic agenda. The memorable “You lie!” shout from Congressman Joe Wilson highlighted what was a modest two-point bump, up to 53%, for Obama in a September address focusing on his healthcare proposals.

How much does President Obama have riding on this address, and how much positive impact will delivering an effective speech mean to his fortunes in the long run? Like Clinton the current President is known for executing rousing speeches, but will he simply be preaching to the choir? Gallup suggests that part of the reason success after the State of the Union tends to be fairly muted is because the audience is made up mostly of supporters. Recent history shows that only during Bill Clinton’s 1995 address were there a virtually even number of Democratic, Republican and independent viewers. On the other hand as recently as 2005 the divisive Presidency of George W. Bush was underscored by over twice as many Republicans (52%) as Democrats (25%) and independents (22%) watching the speech.

For the record Clinton moved from a 47% to 49% approval rating in the days after his 1995 State of the Union address and Bush improved by six-points to 57% benefiting from all of the Republican support ten-years later. President Obama’s scorecard meanwhile remains to be seen. But while his sluggish approval ratings, topping out at around 50% in recent weeks, do not exactly spell disaster an unusually large post-speech bounce for Obama would seem particularly important this go-round.

PHOTO CREDIT: ASSOCIATED PRESS / Charles Dharapak