US Congress's Approval Rate Reaches Single Digits For the First Time

choxorn

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With Election Day just over a year away, a deep sense of economic anxiety and doubt about the future hangs over the nation, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll, with Americans’ distrust of government at its highest level ever.

Almost half of the public thinks the sentiment at the root of the Occupy movement generally reflects the views of most Americans.

With nearly all Americans remaining fearful that the economy is stagnating or deteriorating further, two-thirds of the public said that wealth should be distributed more evenly in the country. Seven in 10 Americans think the policies of Congressional Republicans favor the rich. Two-thirds object to tax cuts for corporations and a similar number prefer increasing income taxes on millionaires.

Not only do 89 percent of Americans say they distrust government to do the right thing, but 74 percent say the country is on the wrong track and 84 percent disapprove of Congress — warnings for Democrats and Republicans alike.

Republican voters remain unenthused about their options to challenge President Obama next year, as the competition intensifies among Mitt Romney, Gov. Rick Perry of Texas and other contenders. The uncertainty has provided an opening for Herman Cain, who was viewed more enthusiastically by Republican primary voters than were other Republican candidates.

The approval rating for Mr. Obama, 46 percent, appears to be elevated by positions he has taken on foreign affairs. Sixty percent of those questioned said they approve of his handling of Iraq, a question added to the poll after his announcement last Friday that American troops would come home by the end of the year.

But the president, whose disapproval rating is also 46 percent, also faces mixed signals from the public about his latest job-creation proposals. While the poll found substantial support for the plan’s individual components, more than half of the public say he lacks a clear plan for creating jobs, despite his extensive travels around the country over the last six weeks selling his proposals.

With the nation’s unemployment rate at 9.1 percent, income inequality remains a palpable issue for Americans. Nearly 9 in 10 Democrats, two-thirds of independents and just over one-third of all Republicans say that the distribution of wealth in the country should be more equitable, even as a majority of Republicans said they think it is fair.

Congressional Republicans are viewed even worse than the president, with 71 percent of the public saying the party does not have a clear plan for creating jobs. And support for several other Republican proposals is more tepid than for Mr. Obama’s initiatives to lift the economy.

Only about a quarter of the public said that lowering taxes on large corporations or repealing the entire national health care law was a good idea. But half of the public favors reducing or repealing regulations on businesses in the United States.

The nationwide telephone poll was conducted from last Wednesday through Monday with 1,650 adults, of whom 1,475 were registered to vote. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus three percentage points.

A remarkable sense of pessimism and skepticism was apparent in question after question in the survey, which found that Congressional approval has reached a new low at 9 percent. The disapproval toward Congress has risen 22 percentage points since the beginning of the year when Republicans took control of the House.

Nearly all Americans agree that the nation’s economic outlook is dark, with 49 percent saying the economy is at a standstill and 36 percent saying it is getting worse. But nearly three-quarters of the public lack confidence that Congress will be able to reach agreement on a plan to help create jobs.

In February, a CBS News poll found that 27 percent of the public said the views of the Tea Party movement reflected the sentiment of most Americans. In the current poll, 46 percent of the public said the same of the Occupy Wall Street movement. “They do reflect the discontent of most Americans,” said Sheila Shriver, 69, a retired special education teacher and independent voter from Columbus, Ohio. “People are unhappy with the way the country seems to be moving, especially when it comes to lack of jobs. Washington hasn’t even been concerned about that.”

Linky

TL;DR version: Lots of statistics. Congress's Disapproval Rate is at 84%, and it has a record-low approval rate of 9%. Almost everyone hates the Government more, doesn't like where America is going, and is agreeing more with Occupy Whatever. Most people don't think Obama's doing a great job, but think that the Congressional Republicans are doing a worse job, and everyone wishes there were more jobs.

Thoughts? Most of this probably shouldn't come as a surprise, but some of it's interesting anyway.
 
Regardless of the question, such as "Would you like to see some puppies tortured?", there is always ~10% of the population that will oppose the majority, always...

This makes what Saddam Hussein did in the polls during his reign all the more impressive. :)
 
Not terribly surprising. Worst economic conditions since the Great Depression lead to lowest "confidence rating" since the Great Depression, which was before they started these kinds of opinion polls.
 
With the party of no in control of the House, it's no surprise.
 
Not terribly surprising. Worst economic conditions since the Great Depression lead to lowest "confidence rating" since the Great Depression, which was before they started these kinds of opinion polls.

In other news: getting screened for cancer is the leading cause of finding out you have cancer.
 
NortonProclamation.jpg
 
Americans! They have no faith in Congress but want them to "do something."


People have no faith in Congress because it doesn't do anything. They were sent their to govern and solve problems. Not to bicker and be useless.



No surprise, really. I would hope that at least half of them lose their next elections. But we'll be lucky if 10% does. :p
 
Yeah, John McCain's quip seems to be pretty accurate...."we're down to paid staffers and blood relatives".

You'd think this sort of thing ought to trigger a no-confidence vote in all congressional leadership (at least the speaker and the minority leaders), but it won't. Even at 9% approval, we're going to see what, maybe 20% of seats change hands?

The American people do want Congress to DO things. There are even a few specific things they would like them to do...but they also voted for gridlock, so we really deserve what we got.
 
Perhaps Congress will eventually learn that pretending to be the voice of the people instead of the corrupt shills of corporate America and the rich will result in most everybody thinking they are useless. Or as Miles suggested, it will all be forgotten again as soon as the economy improves.
 
Americans! They have no faith in Congress but want them to "do something."


So true. The problem is that we've fallen into a two party system. Sure there are technically more than just the Republicans and Democrats out there, but those parties never really amount to much. In a two party system each party has only one goal, defeat the other party at the polls. Anything else, like actually solving problems, is only secondary to them.
 
So true. The problem is that we've fallen into a two party system. Sure there are technically more than just the Republicans and Democrats out there, but those parties never really amount to much. In a two party system each party has only one goal, defeat the other party at the polls. Anything else, like actually solving problems, is only secondary to them.

The US has been two party country since the Civil War. You may want to rethink your rhetoric.
 
It's a pretty meaningless rating since everyone seems to love their guy even while they hate the collection of them. They continually love their own guy even if he's the dirt bag causing all the dysfunction.
 
Americans have little to no appreciation for elected officials, period. The belief in democratic political instant gratification is too heavily ingrained as popular fact for people to accept that political change, and change and reform of any kind, takes time.
 
Americans have little to no appreciation for elected officials, period. The belief in democratic political instant gratification is too heavily ingrained as popular fact for people to accept that political change, and change and reform of any kind, takes time.

First part true, second part false. Americans, in general, are much more distrusting of government than the rest of the first world, not because of a need for instant gratification, though there is some of that, but because of our national culture and history.
 
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