HUFFPOLLSTER: Gallup’s Obama Approval Rating Hits 50 PercentBy - TopicsExpress



          

HUFFPOLLSTER: Gallup’s Obama Approval Rating Hits 50 PercentBy Mark Blumenthal Obama approval hits a milestone on Gallups daily tracking. Open-ended questions show two very different nomination contests brewing. And the nation is bitterly divided by those who think the Patriots cheated and those who dont care. This is HuffPollster for Tuesday, January 27, 2015.GALLUP: OBAMABy Mark Blumenthal Obama approval hits a milestone on Gallups daily tracking. Open-ended questions show two very different nomination contests brewing. And the nation is bitterly divided by those who think the Patriots cheated and those who dont care. This is HuffPollster for Tuesday, January 27, 2015.GALLUP: OBAMA APPROVAL HITS 50 PERCENT - Frank Newport: Less than a week after President Barack Obama delivered his State of the Union address to Congress, his job approval rating reached 50% in Gallup Daily tracking conducted Friday through Sunday. This is the first time the presidents rating has returned to that level in Gallups ongoing three-day rolling averages since June 2013....His approval recovered slightly to 42% by the time of the Nov. 4 midterm elections. Following the elections -- after announcing executive actions on immigration and benefiting from an improving economy and falling gas prices -- his approval rating has gradually improved, averaging 44% in December and 46% thus far in January. Even if Obamas job approval rating doesnt hold at the 50% level, it has consistently registered in the mid- to high 40s throughout January, earning him the highest weekly averages he has seen in more than a year. His weekly average for the seven days ending Jan. 25 was 49%, up from 46% each of the prior three weeks, and from 44% in late December. [Follows growing economic confidence - More from Newport: Notably, the recent uptick in Obamas weekly job rating follows a period of significant improvement in Americans confidence in the U.S. economy. Economic confidence started improving in September. It then intensified in late December when Gallups Economic Confidence Index crossed into positive territory for the first time in more than seven years, and it has since remained positive. Americans ratings of Obama appear to be catching up with their improved economic views. It is not entirely clear why Obamas job approval rating has been slow to rebound relative to improved economic confidence, but one reason could be the political blow Obama took in November over his partys sweeping midterm election losses. Another could be the racial tensions that engulfed the country late last year over certain police interactions with young black males. Other polls show similar trend - Obamas current rating on in the aggregate of all polls depends, as it has for the last month or so, on how much we trust the most recent surveys. The default trend line of the HuffPollster chart, which tracks and combines all of the publicly available national polls, estimates Obamas current approval rating at 45.1 percent, up just over two percentage points since late October. His approval has risen over six percentage points, to 48.8 percent, when we set the chart to less smoothing, an option which makes the trend line more sensitive to shifts in opinion. As HuffPollster noted earlier in the month, two factors argue that the less smoothing setting is more valid: First, most of the new polls released over the last few weeks show an approval percentage above the default charts current 45.1 percent value. Second, over the first six years of the Obama administration, the less smooth trend introduces little or no variation that appears truly random, while picking up real movement that the default trend misses. [Pollster chart, HuffPollster 1/15/2015]THE GOP FIELD REMAINS WIDE OPEN - Susan Page: No wonder so many Republicans are considering a bid for president in 2016: It may be the most wide-open field ever. A new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds Republican and Republican-leaning voters scattered among 18 prospective nominees when asked an open-ended question about whom they want the GOP to nominate for president next year. Undecided finishes first, at 45%, trailed by 2012 nominee Mitt Romney at 16% and former Florida governor Jeb Bush at 13%. No one else gets close to double digits, though potential contenders including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and others make the list of those mentioned. The contrast couldnt be sharper with the other side. A 51% majority of Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters name former secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as their preferred nominee; 31% are undecided. [USA Today, Pollster GOP chart, Pollster Democratic chart]WHY ITS HARD TO MEASURE GENDER BIAS IN RESPONSE TO HILLARY CLINTON - Margie Omero (D) on a Washington Post/ABC News poll that attempts to test if Hillary Clintons gender works in favor or against her: It even suggests by two-to-one, she benefits from her status as the potential first woman President (although far more say it makes no difference). But can we trust voters own perceptions of their prejudices?...Results like these almost certainly reflect the [social] desirability bias, rather than true bias... Taking all this into account means its tricky to draw conclusions about bias from responses to explicit questions about Clintons gender. Not everyone is equally aware of bias, and even fewer are willing to admit their own...Further, in the current Washington Post/ABC poll, party identification -- not gender -- seems to be a bigger driver of ones view of Clintons gender…So well need far more than a single question to decode the role gender has in Clintons political fortunes. We would need to control for party, and mask that were investigating bias. Because if voters are viewing Clinton through the lens of party, rather than gender, perhaps that may be progress after all. [HuffPost]AMERICA WEIGHS IN ON DEFLATEGATE - Peter Moore: 75% of the country have heard about the controversy surrounding the underinflated balls, and 38% of Americans say that the Patriots cheated by playing these balls. 24% say that they didnt cheat, but the largest group is narrowly the 39% of Americans who flat out say that they dont care about whether or not the Patriots are cheaters. Among people who say that they follow professional football, 50% believe that the Patriots cheated while 31% say that they didnt. There has been speculation that the head coach of the Patriots, Bill Belichick, could be suspended from the Super Bowl as punishment for the underinflated balls. Overall, Americans who care about the issue are nearly evenly divided, with 31% saying he should be suspended and 26% saying that he shouldnt. Among football fans opinion is split down the middle, with 39% backing a suspension for Belichick and 38% opposing it. [YouGov]Other polls: -Public Policy Polling: 50 percent of football fans say the Patriots cheated. [@ppppolls] -Emerson College Polling Society: 47 percent of American think the Patriots cheated; 57 percent do not consider the scandal a big deal. [Emerson College] -ESPN: An entertainment-only reader-response vote yields a very clear geographic pattern. [ESPN] HUFFPOLLSTER VIA EMAIL! - You can receive this daily update every weekday morning via email! Just click here, enter your email address, and click sign up. Thats all there is to it (and you can unsubscribe anytime).TUESDAYS OUTLIERS - Links to the best of news at the intersection of polling, politics and political data: -New Jerseyans really dont care that Chris Christie likes the Dallas Cowboys. [Quinnipiac] -Washington University researchers find that 1 out of every 2,000 tweets is about marijuana. [WashPost] -60% of Americans have no knowledge of Sikhism. [NationalSikhCampaign] -Steve Koczela and Rich Parr find Bostonians less than excited about the Olympics. [Commonwealth] -Glen Bolger (R) notes the Republican base is divided on Cuba, while Democrats divide on Keystone. [POS] -Its a mistake to assume that vaccine deniers are hippy liberals. [WashPost] -Niraj Chokshi and Jeff Guo chart how the one percent captured Americas income growth by state. [WashPost] -Is it data is or data are? [The Mendoza Line] -Xkcd does p-values, accurately. [Xkcd via @Protohedgehog] ift.tt/1gB4pon
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 13:48:41 +0000

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