CRISIS MODE: OBAMA LEADERSHIP WOES SINKING DEM HOPES
The WSJ/NBC News poll
dropped like a bucket of cold water on Washington, where fevered attacks over
legislative minutiae and blame-placing in recent weeks has caused politicians
to forget what is actually going on. And what’s going on is that Americans are
deeply frustrated with their president, his refusal to govern by normal means
and his handling of crises at our border and around the world. Foreign policy
seldom intrudes into the midterm election discussion, but when the world seems
to be falling apart, Americans get anxious and upset with their commander in
chief and his party. That’s clearly what’s happening here. Sixty percent of
respondents said the U.S. is in decline, only 35 percent were satisfied with
America’s role in the world, and just 21 percent said that the next generation
would be better off.
The president likes to say that he can act alone on domestic issues, a dubious
supposition. But on international affairs, an area in which American presidents
have enormous latitude, the situation is dire. Respondents offered a negative
assessment of the U.S. response to the Ukrainian war, the Syrian civil war, the
conflict in Gaza, the rise of ISIS and especially the flow of illegal immigrant
minors across the southern border. Just 11 percent were satisfied with the
handling of the border crisis. Overall, just 36 percent of respondents approved
of Obama’s handling of foreign policy, 12 points lower than ahead of the 2010
vote.
The consequences for November are ominous for Democrats. Republicans are in
slightly better shape in the generic-ballot test than they were at this point
in 2010, the year that a wave election washed away the Democratic majority in
the House. The president’s job approval, now at an all-time low of 40 percent
in this poll, is 7 points lower than it was four years ago. The reality is
setting in that Democratic hopes of holding the Senate are winnowing, a
realization that could turn a bad year into a rout. The president promises more
executive action to mobilize base supporters on immigration and corporate
taxes, but with numbers like these, Democrats will be increasingly unwilling to
hustle for what looks like a lost cause. And the harder the president goes in
rallying his base, the deeper he will sink in the estimation of moderate voters
who are so fed up with his administration.
-- 90 days until Nov. 4 --
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