Posted on 07/23/2012 4:16:54 AM PDT by markomalley
Two-thirds of likely voters say the weak economy is Washingtons fault, and more blame President Obama than anybody else, according to a new poll for The Hill.
It found that 66 percent believe paltry job growth and slow economic recovery is the result of bad policy. Thirty-four percent say Obama is the most to blame, followed by 23 percent who say Congress is the culprit. Twenty percent point the finger at Wall Street, and 18 percent cite former President George W. Bush.
The results highlight the reelection challenge Obama faces amid dissatisfaction with his first-term performance on the economy.
The poll, conducted for The Hill by Pulse Opinion Research, found 53 percent of voters say Obama has taken the wrong actions and has slowed the economy down. Forty-two percent said he has taken the right actions to revive the economy, while six percent said they were not sure.
Obama has argued throughout the presidential campaign that his policies have made the economy better. He says recovery is taking a long time because he inherited such deep economic trouble upon taking office in 2009.
The problems were facing right now have been more than a decade in the making, he told an audience last month in Cleveland.
Obamas campaign, under the slogan Forward, has sought to steer voter attention less toward current and past economic performance and more toward questions about Republican Mitt Romneys work in the private sector economy. It has launched attacks on the challengers role as head of the private equity firm Bain Capital, casting him as a jobs outsourcer whose firm shipped thousands of U.S. positions overseas.
The Hill Poll, however, shows the extent to which voters hold Obama responsible for the economy and reveals his vulnerability should the election become primarily a referendum on his economic management.
It finds that voters strongly believe more could have been done by the White House and in Congress to achieve growth in the economy and employment.
While 64 percent of voters consider this downturn to be much more severe than previous contractions, barely one quarter (26 percent) say the agonizingly slow pace of the recovery was unavoidable.
While voters feel Obama carries a greater portion of the blame than others, the poll found almost 6-in-10 are unhappy with the actions of Republicans in Congress who have challenged the president on an array of policy initiatives.
Fifty-seven percent of voters said congressional Republicans have impeded the recovery with their policies, and only 30 percent overall believe the GOP has done the right things to boost the economy.
The tension between a Republican-controlled House of Representatives and a Democratic-run White House has also featured in Obamas campaign strategy.
In his economic speech last month in Cleveland, Obama cast the 2012 election as a chance to choose between two competing visions for the nation.
Whats holding us back is a stalemate in Washington between two fundamentally different views of which direction America should take, he said. This election is your chance to break that stalemate.
Romney agrees that the election is a choice between two radically different views of America, but he characterizes it as a contest between his own vision of an industrious people free to achieve their dreams and Obamas faith in big government.
If there is a silver lining for Obama in the poll results, its that centrist voters, who may well decide the 2012 outcome, tend to blame Republicans in Congress more than the president for hindering a more robust recovery.
Twenty-six percent of centrists cited Congress as most to blame for U.S. economic woes, compared to 20 percent who blame Obama.
Similarly, 53 percent of centrists said Obama has taken the right actions as president to boost the economy, compared with 38 percent who said he had taken the wrong steps.
Seventy-nine percent of centrist voters said Republicans had slowed the economy by taking wrong actions. Only 13 percent of centrists credited GOP lawmakers with policies that have helped the economy.
The poll found sharp differences in opinions along racial lines, with 94 percent of African-Americans saying Obama had taken the right actions on the economy, compared to 34 percent of white voters.
The Hill poll was conducted July 9 among 1,000 likely voters, and has a 3 percentage point margin of error.
What about this hard push to socialism do these "centrists" like? Or... maybe they're not "centrists" at all. Liberals are fond of calling their ideology "mainstream" and "middle of the road."
Come November, we'll see if Americans can pass this IQ test known as an election. I'm not yet confident.
But I think the forces that dominated in 2010 will be no less powerful in 2012, although I concede that Obama in a presidential race will be able to turn out his base with more success than was possible in 2010. I still think that the balance of forces generating turnout will be with the Republicans.
So I could not agree with you more.
One of our worst Presidents.
Apparently a large minority of voters is permanently confused and/or ignorant.
“Facts are facts, and Americans are not as stupid as Obamas experience in South Chicago leads him to believe.”
I see no evidence that Obama is wrong about the utter stupidity of Americans only more and more that he is correct there. This poll included.
President Obama does not know how America works. Period.
He continues to spout left-leaning rhetoric and to blame President Bush. People just want a statesman who will lead the nation out of the economic funk, not a blame-shifter.
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