WASHINGTON - Angry conservatives are driving the approval ratings of
President Bush and the GOP-led Congress to dismal new lows, according to an
AP-Ipsos poll that underscores why Republicans fear an Election Day massacre.
Six months out, the intensity of opposition to Bush and Congress has risen
sharply, along with the percentage of Americans who believe the nation is on the
wrong track.
U.S. President George
W. Bush requests another song from Latina singer Graciela Beltran during
her performance at a Cinco de Mayo celebration in the East Room of the
White House in Washington May 4, 2006.
[Reuters] |
The AP-Ipsos poll also suggests that
Democratic voters are far more motivated than Republicans. Elections in the
middle of a president's term traditionally favor the party whose core supporters
are the most energized.
This week's survey of 1,000 adults, including 865 registered voters, found:
? Just 33 percent of the public approves of Bush's job performance, the
lowest of his presidency. That compares with 36 percent approval in early April.
Forty-five percent of self-described conservatives now disapprove of the
president.
? Just one-fourth of the public approves of the job Congress is doing, a new
low in AP-Ipsos polling and down 5 percentage points since last month. A
whopping 65 percent of conservatives disapprove of Congress.
? A majority of Americans say they want Democrats rather than Republicans to
control Congress (51 percent to 34 percent). That's the largest gap recorded by
AP-Ipsos since Bush took office. Even 31 percent of conservatives want
Republicans out of power.
? The souring of the nation's mood has accelerated the past three months,
with the percentage of people describing the nation on the wrong track rising 12
points to a new high of 73 percent. Six of 10 conservatives say America is
headed in the wrong direction.
Republican strategists said the party stands to lose control of Congress
unless the environment changes unexpectedly.
"It's going to take some events of significance to turn this around," GOP
pollster Whit Ayres said. "I don't think at this point you can talk your way
back from those sorts of ratings."
He said the party needs concrete progress in Iraq and action in Congress on
immigration, lobbying reform and tax cuts.
"Those things would give the country a sense that Washington has heard the
people and is responding in a way that will give conservatives a sense that
their concerns are being addressed," Ayres said.
Conservative voters blame the White House and Congress for runaway government
spending, illegal immigration and lack of action on social issues such as a
constitutional amendment outlawing gay marriage. Those concerns come on top of
public worries about Iraq, the economy and gasoline prices.
Candice Strong, a conservative from Cincinnati, said she backed Bush in 2004,
"but I don't agree with the way he's handling the war and the way he's handling
the economy. I think he should have pulled our troops out of Iraq."
Hardline conservatives are not likely to vote Democratic in the fall, but it
would be just as devastating to the Republicans if conservatives lose their
enthusiasm and stay home on Election Day.
AP-Ipsos polling suggests that Democrats may be winning the motivation game.
Fewer voters today than in 2004 call themselves Republicans or
Republican-leaning. In addition, 27 percent of registered voters were strong
Republicans just before the 2004 election, while only 15 percent fit that
description today.
Democratic numbers are the same or better since 2004.
"This tells us we've got our work cut out for us," said Sen. Sam Brownback, a
conservative Republican from Kansas who may run for president in 2008. "The key
for us is to show restraint on spending and on dealing with immigration."
Bush's strong suit continues to be his handling of foreign policy and
terrorism, an area in which he modestly improved his ratings since April. Still,
a majority of Americans disapprove of his performance on both fronts.
It gets worse. Only 23 percent of the public approve of the way the president
is handling gasoline prices, the lowest in AP-Ipsos polling. Those who strongly
disapprove outnumber those who strongly approve by an extraordinary 55 percent
to 8 percent.
As for his overall job performance, history suggests that Bush's paltry 33
percent spells trouble for Republicans in the fall.
In the past six decades, only one president had a lower job approval rating
six months before a midterm election ¡ª Richard Nixon in May 1974, the year in
which Watergate-scarred Republicans lost 48 seats in the House and four in the
Senate.
By November, Nixon was out of a job too, having resigned the presidency in
August.
Nearly half of the public strongly disapproves of Bush, a huge jump from his
5 percent strong disapproval rating in 2002. The poll has a margin of error of 3
percentage points.
Of all Republicans, nearly 30 percent disapprove of the job Bush is doing,
including 13 percent who feel strongly about it.
"Hopefully this is a wakeup call for my party to get out of its bunker and
hunker mentality," said Republican strategist Greg Mueller, whose firm
specializes in conservative politics.
He urged his party to start criticizing Democratic positions on the Iraq war,
immigration and the economy.
"We've been like a punching bag," Mueller said.
Democrats need to gain 15 seats in the House and six in the Senate for
control of Congress, no easy task in an era that favors incumbents.
"What we have to do is earn the public approval of our right to govern
again," said Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean.
The Democratic strategy is to nationalize the elections around a
throw-the-bums-out theme.
Republicans counter that they will do better than polls suggest when voters
are forced on Election Day to choose between candidates in their particular
House and Senate races.
"But," Ayres said, "we better get in gear."