Editor’s
Note:
This is another in a series of reports on the polling by Clout
Research,
a national opinion research firm in Columbus, Ohio, for WND.com.
Americans are deeply
divided on abortion, marriage, presidential candidates, school-board practices,
spending, taxation, foreign policy, the military, homosexuality, guns and
ammunition, Russia, Cuba, Guantanamo Bay, Benghazi, Trump, Hillary, Uber,
Netanyahu, migrants, Islam, Syria, marijuana, privacy rights, wealth and even
thanking God.
In fact, since the
advent of the Barack Obama presidency, there’s little on which most Americans
agree. Except one thing: The nation is going the WRONG direction.
That’s according to a
new WND/Clout poll by Clout
Research, a national opinion
research firm based in Columbus, Ohio.
Its telephone survey
Oct. 15-19 found 85.3 percent of likely voters believe the U.S. is in bad
shape. That belief is held by 51.9 percent of Democrats, 83.9 percent of independents
and 87.4 percent of Republicans.
“The latest
WND.com/Clout Research survey shows that the dramatic dissatisfaction that
Republican voters felt toward the Obama administration since early in his first
term has spread to include all of Washington,” said Fritz Wenzel, chief of
Clout Research.
“Given what we have seen
in the first act of the race for the Republican presidential nomination, this
is no surprise, as political outsiders lead experienced candidates by wide
margins. But it is appears to be raw economic insecurity, not run-of-the-mill
Beltway politics, that appear to be at the core of the problem.”
Obama scolded
Republicans that “elections have consequences” as he took unilateral action on
issues such as immigration after vowing to “fundamentally transform” America.
Republicans instantly
were put on the defensive. They initially didn’t control the White House, House
or Senate, and the divide on almost every issue deepened. Obama essentially
snubbed GOP leaders, insisting that with his Democrat majority, he didn’t need
them. He pushed through his massive Obamacare plan giving the federal
government control over health insurance plans with only the support of
Democrats. Not a single Republican voted for it.
When the GOP took
control of the U.S. House, a stalemate with the Senate developed as Senator
Majority Leader Harry Reid stalled legislation he didn’t want.
Budget crises came and
went as spending plans to keep the government running were cobbled together at
the last minute. Agencies such as the IRS took their cue from the White House
and launched attacks on non-profit conservative political groups.
Then Obama won
re-election and voters responded two years later by giving the GOP control in
the Senate, creating a stalemate between the White House and Congress.
The new poll shows only
9 of 100 Republicans and 15 of 100 independents believe the nation is going the
right direction.
Even with a member of
their party in the White House, only 44 of 100 Democrats believe America is on
the right track.
A huge majority,
consequently, don’t believe Washington represents them. “It was always unlikely
that most Americans – and Republicans in this latest poll sample – would become
deeply immersed in the day-to-day operations of the federal government. As always,
they seem to have a continuing sense of unease that things in Washington are
not going well, but their concern – we might call it alarm – stems from the
fact that they fear their own economic future and that of the nation,” said
Wenzel.
“Just 12 percent of
Republicans said they think the nation is headed in the right direction, while
85 percent said things are off on the wrong track. This would be a predictable
response from voters whose party is completely out of power, but Republicans
are not out of power – they control both houses of Congress. Clearly, their
voters are not pleased with their performance.”
He said that when his
team asked respondents about their personal financial situation and the state
of the economy, a vast majority of 79 percent said it was either somewhat or
very fragile. Just 21 percent said the economy was strong.
The poll found 92.6
percent of those who identified themselves as conservative believe the nation
is on the wrong track. Among those who call themselves liberal, 90.9 percent
said it is going the wrong direction.
When asked what they
think of the American economy after seven years of Obama’s leadership and
economic policies, nearly 80 percent described it as “very fragile” or
“somewhat fragile.”
Self-identified Democrats,
Republicans, liberals and conservatives were in general agreement, with about
75 percent to 80 percent describing the economy as “somewhat fragile” or “very
fragile.”
The poll’s
candidate-preference results aligned closely with other major polls, with 33
percent of the respondents picking Donald Trump for the GOP nomination, 24
percent Dr. Ben Carson, 10 percent Sen. Marco Rubio, 9 percent Carly Fiorina,
8.9 percent Sen. Ted Cruz and 7.9 percent Gov. Jeb Bush.
See the results:
http://www.wnd.com/2015/10/nearly-everyone-agrees-u-s-going-in-wrong-direction/
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