Obama's Ratings Dive By DICK MORRIS His personal favorability, once a strong point for Obama, has vanished and is now being replaced by a personal dislike that is dragging him down. These data, buried deep in the latest NY Times/CBS poll (of registered voters, not likely voters) are both stark and important. In April, Obama had a 42-45 favorable/unfavorable rating, itself a shock given his vastly higher favorable ratings only a few months before. Now, he has a favorable rating of only 36% and an unfavorable rating of 48%. The NY Times poll showed Romney getting 47% of the vote compared to 46% for Obama (again, this poll is of registered voters, likely voter polls are more pro-Romney). So that means that one-quarter of Obama's voters do not give him a favorable rating - a danger sign for the president. What is most notable about this statistic is that it is not due primarily to the bad economy. While the Times poll showed that the percent of voters who feel he is doing a good job in handling the economy has dropped to 36%, Obama's ratings in this category have been low for some time. The drop in favorability is new. Rather the cause of his decreased likeability is his negative campaigning, both in person and on the air. He is now no longer the sunny, optimistic, friendly person he portrayed himself as being in 2008. Instead, a nasty, surly, angry image has taken over. This change is at the heart of Obama's dilemma. The more he goes negative, the more he hurts himself in the process and undermines the reservoir to good will that has sustained him through tough economic times. As recently as one year ago, Obama's personal favorability was ten points above his vote share in most polls. Now it is ten points below it presaging further a likely further drop in his poll numbers.
Selective Transparency - While we haggle over transcripts and tax returns, the real issues are ignored. By Victor Davis Hanson We are in a transparency mania, but a rather selective sort of one. Bill Clinton, who chose not to tell the truth while under oath and as president, says he is âperplexedâ that Mitt Romney did not offer more candor by providing more than a single yearâs tax returns. Yet neither Jimmy Carter nor Ronald Reagan released more than one yearâs returns. The reformist John McCain released just two. True, the 2004 Democratic candidate, John Kerry, offered some 20 years of returns; but that gesture meant almost nothing because his billionaire wife, Teresa, supplied the vast majority of the funds that fueled Kerryâs opulent recreational lifestyle â and she kept largely quiet about where her money was banked and invested. Few in the press praised George W. Bush for releasing nine years of tax returns. Even then one could argue âSo what?â â given that likely potential candidates can in advance massage their returns through making a bit less money, taking fewer deductions, and giving a little more to charity as they envision a political race in a few years, while incumbent officials usually have open-and-shut government salaries and simple deductions. If we are truly in the age of transparency, then disclosure of medical records seems just as important. After all, the republic has had a checkered record of presidents failing to disclose their illnesses both before and during their tenure. Woodrow Wilson suffered from hypertension, but concealed that ailment from the public through two elections â until a debilitating stroke left him incapacitated during his second term. Franklin Roosevelt never disclosed the full extent of his paralysis, his weak cardiovascular condition, or a number of other major health problems â all of which predated his presidency and would affect his performance while in office. The tanned, youthful John Kennedy was far sicker than we knew; full disclosure about his health might have made his pasty-faced rival, Dick Nixon, seem robust in comparison. In 1992 Paul Tsongas probably knew of his cancerâs recurrence but did not disclose it during the Democratic primaries. Given all that history, and the media demands in 2008 that the septuagenarian cancer survivor John McCain should release thousands of pages of medical records for journalistsâ perusal, why did not Barack Obama simply release his medical records? The Left had always trumpeted the desire for âfull disclosureâ and was probably right in wanting McCain to assure us that he was hale; but, again, why was Obama given a complete pass? Most of us have had to release our undergraduate transcripts either when being considered for a job or when applying for post-baccalaureate education. Yet Barack Obama apparently does not wish the information about his college career known either. Is he afraid that we will learn that his Occidental and Columbia transcripts were as dismal as was John McCainâs Naval Academy ranking, near the bottom of his class? But whereas the media frowned upon McCainâs carousing undergraduate days, suggesting that they might prove a harbinger of an unpredictable presidency, they were content with blissful ignorance about Obamaâs serial drug use as an undergraduate. There is some reason to worry about Obamaâs own transparency, given that he is the least vetted sitting president since John Kennedy, whose vita continues to expand in unwelcome ways nearly half a century after his death. A sympathetic biographer has revealed that the main incidents in President Obamaâs life, as told in his own memoir, were largely exaggerated, if not fabricated altogether. We are still perplexed why Barack Obama for over decade permitted Kenya to be listed as his birthplace on his literary agentâs biography of him. Obama has not been forthcoming about his complex two-decade relationship with the odious Reverend Jeremiah Wright. We know now that the president was far more intimate with ex-terrorist Bill Ayers and felon Tony Rezko than he ever let on. When questions come up about the presidentâs reluctance to release medical records or college transcripts, or the evidence that he was a fabulist in matters of his own autobiography, the Obama campaignâs defense is essentially that his three and a half years as president have established that he is competent; such past questions, his defenders say, are rendered irrelevant by his present performance. But neither the media nor Obamaâs supporters extend that allowance to Romney, who, as head of the 2002 winter Olympic games and as a successful governor of Massachusetts, long ago proved that his lucrative business career had not led to malfeasance but rather to fiscal acumen put to good service for the state. So how much do we wish to detour from the issues to know about the background of either candidate Romney or incumbent Obama? Some sort of compromise seems in order. If transparency is really what the public demands, and if these issues distract attention from a necessary debate over the economy, then in bipartisan fashion let us now demand full disclosure from both candidates: ten years of income tax returns from each, full and complete access for journalists to all known medical records of each, and complete release of all undergraduate and graduate grades, test scores, and other records. Romney may not wish to release a decadeâs worth of careful tax planning and investment that might reveal him to be more concerned about making money and keeping most of it than about outsourcing or foreign bank accounts. Obama may likewise be embarrassed over a prior undisclosed ailment, or a relatively unimpressive Occidental or Columbia record that would belie his media reputation as the âsmartestâ man ever to serve as president in the nationâs history. Perhaps for much of August we might hear that Romney had a gargantuan Swiss bank account, or more bankers in the Caribbean than we had surmised. Maybe Obama smoked more marijuana than he has admitted to or received lots of Cs and even some Ds in International Relations â grades that would make it almost impossible for most students to get into Harvard Law School. But such embarrassments would pass by the end of the summer, and we, the wiser, could move on to the campaign debate over the economy. In short, it is time either to demand that both candidates put up everything â or to shut up and return to the debate over two radically different visions of how to fix an ailing America.
A Nation On Handouts by Dick Morris http://www.dickmorris.com/a-nation-...s&utm_medium=dmreports&utm_campaign=dmreports
Many Broken Promises <iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/JLaH7IJWeTk?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Lies, Lies, Lies <iframe width="640" height="360" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/WwPq5S_M_pc?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
In spite of all this, Odumbo apparently still leads in the polls. Can only be because 1/2 of the populace (1) is stupid as a bag of hammers, (2) is so greedy they don't care about the future of America, their children or grandchildren so long as they "get a check now", or (3) both. Why should the productive half of Americans be forced to subsidize the layabout, greedy other half??
That's not clear, the liberal media play a lot of games including posting a great number of biased polls. If you limit your attention to polls that are drawn from likely (not registered) voters with an balanced representation of Dems, Repubs and Independents, the numbers are very close, with Romney often leading. That's to be epected given the fact that everybody knows Obama and see him on TV all the time, a gap that Romney is filling gradually.
True. But if people used their head instead of their greed and were concerned about America's and their children's future.... Odumbo would be getting STOMPED in the polls... There is still a 50-50 possibility that asshole gets reelected... what a tragedy that would be.