Rising Gas Prices Have Dented Obama's Rating: Poll

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Rising Gas Prices Have Dented Obama's Rating: Poll

By Gary Langer | ABC News – 10 hrs ago

Rising Gas Prices Have Dented Obama's Rating: Poll (ABC News)
More than half of Americans for the first time expect Barack Obama to be re-elected - but that won't make it easy: Even as expectations have moved his way, rising gas prices have dented the president's rating on handling the economy, his overall job approval has slipped back under 50 percent and he's reverted to a dead heat in public preferences against Mitt Romney.

The results of the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll mark two political realities: One, the sharp division of public attitudes for and against Obama, with continued greater intensity of sentiment among his critics. And two, the damaging political effects of rising gasoline prices, which have surpassed the federal budget deficit as Obama's single weakest issue.

Americans by a broad 65-26 percent disapprove of how the president is handling the price of gas, which has gained 49 cents a gallon this year to an average $3.79. Strong critics outnumber strong approvers by nearly 4-1. And it's important: A vast 89 percent are concerned about the recent run-up in gas prices; 66 percent are "very" concerned about it.

The survey, produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, shows a broader impact, underscoring the risk to Obama. His approval rating on handling the economy overall has lost 6 points in a month, to 38 percent, a mere 3 points from his career low in October. Intensity again is highly negative: Fifty percent strongly disapprove of the president's work on the economy, up 9 points to a new high in his presidency.

Challenging as that is for Obama, perceived weakness in his Republican opposition counteracts some of these views. Fifty-four percent of Americans now expect the president to win a second term, up by 8 points from January and by a sharp 17 points from October, before employment gains breathed new life into his then-dim prospects.

Yet the hurdles for Obama remain serious. His support against Romney has pulled back: After a 51-45 percent reading last month, Obama and Romney now stand at 47-49 percent among registered voters. And it's 49-46 percent matching Obama against Rick Santorum. Those mark a scant 4-point gain in support for Romney vs. Obama, and a 5-point gain for Santorum.

GOP - The gap between expectations for Obama in November and his current support is yet more pronounced in comparable results for Romney within his own party. Seventy-four percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents expect Romney to be the nominee. But far fewer favor that outcome: Thirty-one percent would like to see him win the nomination, essentially no more than the 29 percent who prefer Santorum. Ron Paul and Newt Gingrich trail with 15 and 14 percent, respectively.

That result marks continuing compunctions about Romney within the GOP ranks. While he leads easily in trust to handle the economy, and especially in views of his electability, he falls short in two other key areas. Leaned Republicans by 31-22 percent trust Santorum over Romney to handle contentious social issues such as abortion and gay marriage, a 12-point gain for Santorum from last month. And Romney only runs evenly with Santorum, 25 to 27 percent, on who best reflects core GOP values.

Differences among groups largely reflect those seen in the Republican primaries to date. Evangelicals prefer Santorum over Romney by a broad 49-19 percent. Santorum leads among those focused on a candidate who shares their religious beliefs, by 39-27 percent, and among very conservatives, by 38 to 21 percent. Romney, in turn, leads among non-evangelicals, matches Santorum among somewhat conservatives and leads among moderates and the few liberals in this population.

While nearly seven in 10 Republicans and Republican leaning independents prefer someone else as the party's nominee, Romney scores reasonably as second choice: Twenty-seven percent of current non-Romney supporters pick him as their No. 2. That's identical to the number of leaned Republicans who name either Santorum or Gingrich as their second preference.

In the end, similar numbers of leaned Republicans say they'd be satisfied with either Romney as their nominee - 66 percent - or Santorum, 69 percent. But that's lower than it might be; in an ABC/Post poll in March 2004, by contrast, 88 percent of leaned Democrats said they'd be satisfied with John Kerry as their nominee.

GAS/ECONOMY - As is fitting after the longest and deepest downturn since the Great Depression, economic attitudes remain the linchpin of the 2012 election. A serious challenge for Obama is that just 31 percent of Americans say his economic policies have made the economy better - his key argument for re-election.

That's moved his way, up sharply from a low of 17 percent in September. But the change has come almost exclusively among Democrats. And as many Americans overall, 30 percent, instead say his policies have made things worse, while 37 percent say they've had no real effect - hardly the sort of economic review Obama wants to bring to the voters in November.

On gasoline, the public is divided on whether prices will go up and stay up, or gyrate up and down. The latter view may be tempering the impact of the increase this time; people who see rising gas prices as an ongoing, cyclical condition are much less apt to see it as a very serious problem, as well as more apt to approve of Obama and to support him for re-election.

Obama's approval, meanwhile, has taken a hit especially among Americans who are less financially secure, and therefore more likely to be affected by higher gas prices: Compared with last month his job rating is down by 17 points among whites with incomes less than $50,000, and by a similar 15 points among non-college-educated whites. His rating drops to 37 percent among people who report financial hardship from gas prices, vs. 60 percent of those who don't

http://news.yahoo.com/election-expectations-move-obamas-way-yet-rising-gas-040142901--abc-news.html
 

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Subject: A tale of two houses









You decide...

A Tale of Two Houses







House #1



document.jpg;jsessionid=abcCL5NjWpZQjbkJf7hyt


House #1

A 20 room mansion (not including 8 bathrooms) heated by natural gas. Add on a pool (and a pool house) and a separate guest house, all heated by gas. In one month this residence consumes more energy than the average American household does in a year. The average bill for electricity and natural gas runs over $2400 per month. In natural gas alone, this property consumes more than 20 times the national average for an American home. This house is not situated in a Northern or Midwestern 'snow belt' area. It's in the South.





House #2

document.jpg;jsessionid=abcCL5NjWpZQjbkJf7hyt
b

House #2
Designed by an architecture professor at a leading national university. This house incorporates every 'green' feature current home construction can provide. The house is 4,000 square feet (4 bedrooms) and is nestled on a high prairie in the American southwest. A central closet in the house holds geothermal heat-pumps drawing ground water through pipes sunk 300 feet into the ground.

The water (usually 67 degrees F) heats the house in the winter and cools it in the summer. The system uses no fossil fuels such as oil or natural gas and it consumes one-quarter electricity required for a conventional heating/cooling system. Rainwater from the roof is collected and funneled into a 25,000 gallon underground cistern. Wastewater from showers, sinks and toilets goes into underground purifying tanks and then into the cistern. The collected water then irrigates the land surrounding the house. Surrounding flowers and shrubs native to the area enable the property to blend into the surrounding rural landscape.





**************************************************************************

HOUSE #1 is outside of Nashville , Tennessee ;

it is the home of the "Environmentalist Democrat" Al Gore. Nobel Prize winner


HOUSE #2 is on a ranch near Crawford , Texas ;

it is the residence of the ex-President of the United States , Republican George W. Bush


document.jpg;jsessionid=abcCL5NjWpZQjbkJf7hyt


I sure hope this gets passed to everyone!
And, yes .... I checked Snopes prior to forwarding it.
 

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Russ, you couldn't possibly be implying that Al Gore is a hypocrite, could you? :ohno:
 

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Russ, you couldn't possibly be implying that Al Gore is a hypocrite, could you? :ohno:

Both houses look (or don't look) the same on my post. lol

The reality is one that the liberals just can't cope with though. The real hypocrites are the ones who give Gore a pass, and Obama a pass, and live in their own little world. Reality is a concept that is beyond a liberals comprehension.
 

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As gas prices soar, Obama pays steep cost too in poll plummet

By ANDREW MALCOLM

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As gas prices climb higher and President Obama drives to his fundraisers in armored limos and SUVs urging Americans to use more fuel-efficient forms of energy, he's starting to pay a higher price too -- in poll numbers.

A new Washington Post-ABC News Poll this week finds about two-out-of-three Americans now disapprove of the Chicago Democrat's job on gas prices, whatever that's been.

Nearly as many (59%) disapprove of Obama's job on the still sluggish economy, including 50% who intensely disapprove. That's the worst yet in a Post poll and an increase of nine points in the last month.

Of course, it's still a long time (239 days) until Nov. 6 when the nation gets to render a real verdict on Obama, who threatens to finish the job if he gets a second term. But then it's already been a long time (1,147 days) since the ex-state senator came into office promising all sorts of things if only we'd spend nearly a trillion dollars on his stimulus plan, which has made the term "Recovery Summer" a guaranteed laugh line.

Last Friday's employment numbers confirmed this 49-month jobs recession as the longest since World War II. And an IBD editorial addresses Obama's energy policy here.

The new Post Poll also finds that Obama's overall job approval rating, which was 50% approve and 46% disapprove last month, has now flipped and started back down again, 50% disapprove-46% approve. Support plummeted steeply especially among independents and non-college-graduate whites.

Of course, even a Chicago Democrat knows the lethality of soaring gas prices in election years. So, Obama says all the right things, expressing sympathy to those families with hard-hit fuel budgets, blaming Iran, Mideast turmoil and Republicans and pointing out that domestic oil production is up.

He neglects to mention that production increases are despite his policies, not because of them. Current drilling on federal lands is mostly the result of permits granted by the previous administration, not this fellow. Drilling permits are down on federal property; the oil increase is coming from private lands with owners responding to the market.

While Obama says he wants to boost domestic oil production to increase energy independence, he touts access to new reserves off Brazil. His vetoing of the no-brainer Keystone XL pipeline proposal seems inexplicable. And then his active personal legislative lobbying last week to defeat its Senate rebirth seems duplicitous, since the pipeline would bring more than 700,000 barrels a day of oil from the secure source in Canada.

Of course, Obama will take some photo op steps in coming months to appear to address the rising gas price problems. Probably release some oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which is like tossing food from a parade float to address the nation's nutrition problems.


Showing his keen grasp of free market forces, Obama has ordered Justice officials to investigate oil speculation. Of course, there's oil speculation. It's called the futures market. And watching Obama's policies instead of his words, those experts see higher prices coming ahead, as do most Americans in the poll.

When taking office, Energy Secy. Stephen Chu expressed a desire to drive U.S. gas prices to the European levels of $8-$9 a gallon, much like taxation on cigarettes to discourage their use. This administration has achieved more than half that European goal already.

Perhaps the clearest commitment of Obama to his extreme environmental agenda came recently on Capitol Hill where Chu was asked if the president's overall goal was "to get our price lower?"

Chu replied, "No. The overall goal is to decrease our dependency on oil." (Note: Not "foreign oil" but "oil.")

For now, however, the political price for that goal is increasing. Obama has long held significant leads in hypothetical election match-ups against both Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum, both of whom tout the need to develop the nation's own vast resources to boost energy independence. Now, the Post-ABC News Poll finds the Democrat statistically tied with both Republicans.

A new Rassmussen Reports tracking poll finds Romney leading Obama by five points for the third straight day. The same survey finds 83% of Republicans supportive of Romney, while84% of Democrats support Obama. However, while only 6% of GOP voters would consider crossing over to vote for the Democrat, twice that many Democrats (12%) would consider voting for Romney.
 

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