Support for the stimulus package is
dropping from narrow majority support
to below that. There is no sense that
the stimulus package itself will work
quickly, and according to a recent
Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, close to
60% said it would make only a marginal
difference in the next two to four
years. Rasmussen data shows that
people now actually oppose Mr. Obama's
budget, 46% to 41%. Three-quarters
take this position because it will
lead to too much spending. And by
2-to-1, voters reject House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi's call for a second
stimulus package.
While over two-thirds support the
plan to help homeowners refinance
their mortgage, a 48%-36% plurality
said that it will unfairly benefit
those who have been irresponsible,
echoing Rick Santelli's call to arms
on CNBC.
And although a narrow majority
remains confident in Mr. Obama's goals
and overall direction, 45% say they do
not have confidence, a number that has
been growing since the inauguration
less than two months ago. With three-quarters
saying that they expect the economy to
get worse, it is hard to see these
numbers improving substantially.
There is no real appetite for
increasing taxes to pay for an
expanded health-insurance program.
Less than half would support such an
idea, which is 17% less than the
percentage that supported government
health insurance when Bill Clinton
first considered it in March of 1993.
While voters blame Republicans for
the lack of bipartisanship in
Washington, the fact is that they do
not believe Mr. Obama has made any
progress in improving the impulse
towards cooperation between the two
parties. Further, nearly half of
voters say that politics in Washington
will be more partisan over the next
year.
Fifty-six percent of Americans
oppose giving bankers any additional
government money or any guarantees
backed by the government. Two-thirds
say Wall Street will benefit more than
the average taxpayer from the new bank
bailout plan. This represents a jump
in opposition to the first plan passed
last October. At that time, 45%
opposed the bailout and 30% supported
it. Now a solid majority opposes the
bank bailout, and 20% think it was a
good idea. A majority believes that
Mr. Obama will not be able to cut the
deficit in half by the end of his term.
Only less than a quarter of
Americans believe that the federal
government truly reflects the will of
the people. Almost half disagree with
the idea that no one can earn a living
or live "an American life" without
protection and empowerment by the
government, while only one-third agree.
Despite the economic stimulus that
Congress just passed and the budget
and financial and mortgage bailouts
that Congress is now debating, just
19% of voters believe that Congress
has passed any significant legislation
to improve their lives. While
Congress's approval has increased, it
still stands at only 18%. Over two-thirds
of voters believe members of Congress
are more interested in helping their
own careers than in helping the
American people. When it comes to the
nation's economic issues, two-thirds
of voters have more confidence in
their own judgment than they do in the
average member of Congress.
Finally, what probably accounts for
a good measure of the confidence and
support the Obama administration has
enjoyed is the fact that they are not
Republicans. Virtually all Americans,
more than eight in 10, blame
Republicans for the current economic
woes, and the only two leaders with
lower approval ratings than Harry Reid
and Nancy Pelosi are Republican
leaders Mitch McConnell and John
Boehner.
All of this is not just a subject
for pollsters and analysts to debate.
It shows fundamentally that public
confidence in government remains low
and is slipping. We face the
possibility of substantial gridlock
along with an absolute absence of
public confidence that could come to
mirror the lack of confidence in the
American economy that the Dow and the
S&P are currently showing.
Mr. Schoen, formerly a
pollster for President Bill Clinton,
is the author of "Declaring
Independence: The Beginning of the End
of the Two Party System" (Random
House, 2008). Mr. Rasmussen is
president of Rasmussen Reports, an
independent national polling company.