Posted on 08/08/2011 11:45:30 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
With the U.S. economy in dire straits, the re-election and approval data for pro-abortion President Barack Obama doesnt look good as new Gallup information shows the president under 50 percent in all but 11 states.
According to six months of Gallup polling, Obama eclipses the 50 percent mark in just 11 states and the District of Columbia. Added together, the states and the nations capital district would net Obama just 173 of the 270 electoral college votes he would need to win re-election to another four-year term.
The data Gallup released today is a state-by-state look at more than 90,000 interviews dating back to January of this year and, given the current poor state of the economy and the fact that poling data from Gallup recently showed him at his lowest levels historically, the analysis is likely worse than Gallup indicates when it includes older numbers. In January, Gallup rated Obama at a 49-45 percent approval rating and that has dropped to 42-50 percent today.
The 11 states that favor Obama include the New England and Northeast states (other than New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island), Illinois, Minnesota and California.
Obamas support is greatest in the East, with 8 of his 10 highest approval ratings occurring in states located in the Northeast or Mid-Atlantic region of the country. The 2 non-Eastern states ranking among the 10 highest are Obamas home states of Hawaii and Illinois, Gallup noted. States giving Obama his lowest approval ratings are more varied regionally, with several in the West but also including Southern and Midwestern states.
As President Obama prepares for his re-election bid next year, his approval ratings nationally and at the state level bear watching. Typically, presidents with approval ratings above 50% get re-elected, though George W. Bush won re-election in 2004 with a 48% approval rating at the time of the election, Gallup noted. Thus, a key for Obama is to try to push his national approval rating back above the 50% mark before November 2012, and to have it at or above that level in as many states as possible, given that the presidential election will be determined by the winner of the greater number of state electoral votes.
Including the historic data, Obama has a 50%+ mark is just 16 states and D.C., netting only 215 of the 270 electoral votes needed for election. To win re-election, he would need to capture Iowa, Pennsylvania, Florida and Georgia, states where he enjoys a 47-49 percent approval rating.
The picture is likely more bleak for Obama as Gallup only measured adults, rather than registered or likely voters. Doing so, which gives a more accurate picture of the election landscape, would provide a more favorable picture for Republicans and a bleaker one for the abortion advocate.
Obama hit a 50 percent disapproval level in Gallups survey just once in August 2010 and his approval rating has never dropped to 40 percent before.
The Gallup survey follows a late July poll of 1,500 registered voters by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press that finds support for Obama among independents has fallen from 42 percent in May to 31 percent while his disapproval with them has shot up to 54 percent.
The sizeable lead Barack Obama held over a generic Republican opponent in polls conducted earlier this year has vanished, Pew said. Currently, 41% of registered voters say they would like to see Obama reelected, while 40% say they would prefer to see a Republican candidate win in 2012. In May, Obama held an 11-point lead.
The Pew survey finds while the 11 point lead over a generic Republican, which Obama had in May after the death of Osama bin Laden, Republicans are still not focused on his replacement as just 24 percent have given much thought to their 2012 options. Overall in the GOP race, Mitt Romney continues to hold a significant lead among Republican voters with 21%, followed by Rick Perry at 12%, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann at 11%, Ron Paul at 9% and Herman Cain at 8%.
Still, the survey finds just 31% of independent voters want to see Obama reelected, down from 42% in May and 40% in March. Where Obama held a slim 7-point edge among independent registered voters two months ago, a generic Republican holds an 8-point edge today. This is consistent with a drop in Obamas approval among all independents. Currently, a majority (54%) disapprove of Obamas performance for the first time in his presidency. His approval among independents has slipped to 36% from 42% last month and 49% in late May.
DC is meaningless in Presidential elections. Why bother to show this unless they are trying to help this loser out?
Because he tops the ticket....look for the GOP to gain at least 10 Senate seats...folks..a 60 seat, filabuster proof majority is NOT impossible..
The scary thought is that states like New York and California [with large numbers of electoral college votes], seem to vote blindly Democrat.
So. . .164 electoral votes. . . assuming no switchovers of close states. . .
I find it interesting that California, Oregon, and Washington State are not on this list. If I were a strategist in the WH, that alone would make start me “cryin’ for my momma”.
Interesting.
Conn (-1)
New Jers (-3)
Maryland (-3)
Delaware (-3)
Mass (-5)
New York (-6)
Wisc (-7)
Michigan (-7)
New Mex (-8)
Washin (-8)
Oregon (-8)
Maine (-8)
Illinois (-8)
Califor (-8)
Rhode I (-13)
Vermont (-13)
Hawaii (-16)
What I find *very* interesting, is that while he’s dropped about a percent in Connecticut, Rhode Island is not on this list either.
That’s a drop of at least 13 percent.
What if Hillary runs as an independent?
17 months until January 2013. That’s a whole bunch of time for a whole bunch of ups and downs.
You need more than 60 Senate seats. You need more like 65, to overcome the liberal Republicans.
Hillary running will only make it more of a lock for any repubic to win.
Just 54% in Illinois and 56% in Hawaii???!!!! His supposed “home” states!
SAFE STATES:
CT - 60
MD - 59
DE - 59
MA - 57
NY - 57
HI - 56
Lean Dem:
IL - 54
CA - 53
MN - 52
Tossup:
RI - 50
ME - 50
MI - 50
WI - 50
WA - 50
IA - 49
Lean R (switch)
FL - 47
NC - 46
VA - 46
PA - 46
NM - 46
Solid R (switch)
OH - 45
NV - 44
OR - 44
CO - 44
NH - 40
Weak R (Holds)
GA - 48 (O+1)
MS - 45 (O+2)
What? Obama is less than 50% in California? WOW!
He’s lost his support in Mountain time zone. He’s hanging onto CA and HI, on the west coast.
Right now the battleground is in the rust belt and Canada bornder states:
IA, MI, WI, ME, MI, MN, IL, PA and WA. OH is solid R (+5), and IN is R+10.
His support has held up in certain states with heavily amish population. CT, DE, MA, NY, MD, NC, GA, VA, MS but has still slipped in all but GA and MS.
Not yet. Still at 53 percent approval. But he’s lost Oregon and has 50 percent approval in Washington.
Good observation. I keep saying we need about a 68% majority in BOTH houses, even with a conservative or “republican” president to ensure that the weak-kneed will be overcome. Look at Col. West. Great guy, patriot to the core, and he still voted the wrong way.
Even in DC, he’s down 9.
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