The Delaware Gazette

Poll shows Americans’ pessimism on economy growing

JENNIFER AGIESTA, TOM RAUM

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Amer­i­cans are grow­ing more pes­simistic about the econ­omy and han­dling it remains Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s weak spot and biggest chal­lenge in his bid for a sec­ond term, accord­ing to a new Asso­ci­ated Press-GfK poll.

And the gloomier out­look extends across party lines, includ­ing a steep decline in the share of Democ­rats who call the econ­omy “good,” down from 48 per­cent in Feb­ru­ary to just 31 per­cent now.

Almost two-thirds of Amer­i­cans — 65 per­cent — dis­ap­prove of Obama’s han­dling of gas prices, up from 58 per­cent in Feb­ru­ary. Nearly half, 44 per­cent, “strongly dis­ap­prove.” And just 30 per­cent said they approve, down from 39 per­cent in February.

These find­ings come despite a steady decline in gas prices in recent weeks after a surge ear­lier in the year. The national aver­age for a gal­lon of gaso­line stood at $3.75, down from a 2012 peak of $3.94 on April 1.

U.S. pres­i­dents have lim­ited abil­ity to affect gas prices, which are deter­mined in inter­na­tional mar­kets. How­ever, the party out of power always blames who­ever is pres­i­dent at the time for high gas prices, as Repub­li­can Mitt Rom­ney is doing now and as Demo­c­rat Obama did in 2008 when George W. Bush sat in the Oval Office.

Of all the issues cov­ered by the poll, Obama’s rat­ings on gas prices were his worst.

The public’s views tilt neg­a­tive on his han­dling of the over­all econ­omy, 52 per­cent dis­ap­prove while 46 per­cent dis­ap­prove. In Feb­ru­ary, Amer­i­cans were about evenly divided on his han­dling of the issue.

The econ­omy is the No. 1 issue in the pres­i­den­tial race, thanks to the deep­est eco­nomic down­turn since the Great Depres­sion and one of the shallowest-ever recoveries.

While the reces­sion offi­cially ended in sum­mer 2009, unem­ploy­ment remains stub­bornly high, at 8.1 per­cent in April. Some 12.5 mil­lion Amer­i­cans are out of work.

The increas­ing skep­ti­cism toward the recov­ery tracks a weak­en­ing over­all econ­omy as mea­sured by the gross domes­tic prod­uct, and matches eco­nomic growth down­grades by many eco­nomic forecasters.

Against this back­ground, the weak econ­omy looms as a huge lia­bil­ity for Obama, and any drop in pub­lic con­fi­dence in his abil­ity to deal with it can threaten his re-election prospects. Although Obama held broad advan­tages over Rom­ney on han­dling social issues and pro­tect­ing the coun­try, when it came to the econ­omy about the same per­cent­age said they trust Rom­ney to han­dle it as trust Obama.

Mind­ful of Obama’s vul­ner­a­bil­ity, Rom­ney focuses fre­quently on the econ­omy, sug­gest­ing that his busi­ness back­ground makes him the can­di­date who can cre­ate jobs. Like most Repub­li­cans, he blames Obama’s poli­cies for mak­ing the econ­omy worse.

Obama acknowl­edges that times remain hard for many, but says con­di­tions are slowly improv­ing. He sug­gests the best chance for full recov­ery is if vot­ers stick with him.

Heather Beck­man, 29, of Lan­tana, Fla., is a Demo­c­rat who said she’s unde­cided about her vote but leaned to Obama. She believes the pres­i­dent can put the econ­omy back on track, but not by him­self. “At some point, the Repub­li­cans and Democ­rats have to come together to turn the econ­omy around. As well as the rest of the country.”

How­ever, Repub­li­can Roni Lovell, 68, of Edge­wood, Wash., said Romney’s the one to help the econ­omy turn the cor­ner. “He has helped some really big com­pa­nies come out of their finan­cial woes,” said the retired school admin­is­tra­tor. “Obama has proved he can’t do it and it’s time some­one else gives it a try.”

The poll shows that opti­mism on an eco­nomic recov­ery ear­lier this year has all but stalled. The share of Amer­i­cans describ­ing the econ­omy as “good” dropped 10 points since Feb­ru­ary, to 20 per­cent. Two-thirds see the econ­omy as “poor” and about one in seven say it’s some­where in between. And just 22 per­cent say the econ­omy got bet­ter in the past month, down from 28 per­cent say­ing so in February.

Democ­rats remain more opti­mistic about the econ­omy in the com­ing year than do inde­pen­dents and Repub­li­cans, but still, the per­cent­age that is hope­ful for improve­ment in the next year dipped 10 points since February.

Fewer than one in three expect their household’s eco­nomic for­tunes to improve in the com­ing year, down from 37 per­cent in Feb­ru­ary. Eigh­teen per­cent see their finances as wors­en­ing, up from 11 per­cent in February.

And 35 per­cent expect the unem­ploy­ment rate, which has been inch­ing down for months, to start going back up. Thirty per­cent thought that in Feb­ru­ary. Inde­pen­dents are closer to Repub­li­cans than Democ­rats on that issue, with only 18 per­cent of inde­pen­dents and Repub­li­cans opti­mistic that the job­less rate will improve, while 40 per­cent of Democ­rats expect it to.

For now, Obama remains pop­u­lar. His approval rat­ing stands at 53 per­cent. But a stalling recov­ery could cause it to slide.

The AP-GfK poll was con­ducted May 3–7 by GfK Roper Pub­lic Affairs and Cor­po­rate Com­mu­ni­ca­tions. It involved land­line and cell phone inter­views with 1,004 adults nation­wide and has a mar­gin of sam­pling error of plus or minus 3.9 per­cent­age points.

AP News Posted by on May 10 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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