GOP White Voter Strategy

(Community Matters) Interesting Thomas Edsell read in Huff Post

The appeal of the [GOP] anti-Obama agenda has proven to be particularly strong among whites of low and moderate incomes. The Pew Center, tracking evaluations of Obama’s job performance, found in a July 30 report that there “has been essentially no shift in opinion among affluent whites [but] among whites with annual family incomes of less than $75,000, Obama’s approval ratings have declined substantially (from 57% in June to 47% today). Assessments of Obama’s performance remain high among African Americans (85%).”

ABC News polling similarly found in late June that the possible costs to consumers of cap-and-trade legislation “are particularly important to less well-off Americans. Among those making less than $50,000 a year, support for regulating greenhouse gas emissions drops by 17 points (from 75 percent to a still-majority 58 percent) if it raises prices; support if it costs $10 a month is 49 percent; and at $25, just 35 percent.”

The trend lines reported by Gallup are perhaps the most striking: At the start of this year, during late January, Gallup found that Obama’s job approval ratings stood at 63 percent among whites, 86 percent among African Americans, and 74 percent among Hispanics. In the Gallup survey taken in late July, Obama had gained 9 points among blacks, reaching 95 percent job approval, and was holding his own among Hispanics, dropping a statistically insignificant 2 points to 72 percent. Among white respondents, however, he had dropped 16 points to 47 percent. These findings are reinforced by recent trend lines emerging in the Wall Street Journal/NBC polling series. In that series, the decline has been sharpest among white men, whose approval-disapproval ratio fell by 27 points, from 50-36 to 40-53.

. . . . In the short term, McInturff and others point out that virtually all the Democrats’ vulnerabilities are among Anglo voters, especially white men. These trends are likely to produce some victories for Republican candidates in 2010, but the party continues to have long-term problems in building a sustainable election-day majority.

. . . . For the Republican Party, these trends not only illustrate the danger of attempting to win without improving margins among minority voters, but also the danger that a modest collection of Congressional wins next year – say 10-15 House seats –will only reinforce the dominant forces in the House and Senate wings of the GOP that adamantly support a conservative agenda that precludes concessions to minority groups. That, in turn, would increase the likelihood that the Democratic Party will be able to maintain majority status in 2012 and beyond.

Knowing the President’s determination to serve as the President for ALL Americans (rich/middle class/poor, all races, all ages), I feel certain these polls receive proper attention at the White House. It may be that there’s an interim acquiescence that the disinformation from right-wing talk radio and certain GOP electeds will just have to playout and that the results of the stimulus package, healthcare reform, energy/enviornmental policies will triumph among all voters.

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