Obama’s Social Security Talk Is Turning Voters Off, Pollsters Say
By Dan Froomkin
January 19, 2011
President Barack Obama's apparent willingness to consider cuts in Social Security benefits may be winning him points with Washington elites, but it's killing him with voters, who see the program as inviolate and may start to wonder what the Democratic Party stands for, if not for Social Security.That's the conclusion of three top progressive pollsters who spoke to reporters Wednesday at a briefing sponsored by the Economic Policy Institute, the Century Foundation and Demos.
"For the public, cutting benefits is the problem, not the solution," said Guy Molyneux, a partner at Hart Research Associates.
A post-election poll by Celinda Lake's Lake Research Partners found that, by a margin of 3 percentage points,
Americans now trust Republicans in Congress more than Democrats when it comes to Social Security -- surely the first time since the program became a signature issue for the Democratic Party in the 1930s.
The public favors congressional Republicans over Obama on Social Security by an even larger 6-point margin. Obama's 26-percent rating is not only less than half Bill Clinton's (53 percent), it's even lower than that of George W. Bush (37 percent), whose proposal to privatize the program went down in flames.
Read the full article at:
http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/news/entry/obamas-social-security-talk-is-turning-voters-off-pollsters-say/#-------------------------------------------
President, Dem lawmakers diverge on Social Security
By Alexander Bolton
January 19, 2011
The president has indicated a willingness to make significant changes to Social Security, while congressional Democrats are wary of his striking a deal with the GOP on the popular entitlement program.
Senior White House officials have told Senate Democrats that raising the Social Security retirement age and changing the calculation for cost-of-living adjustments are “on the table” but no final decisions have been made, according to Senate sources.
Strategists for congressional Democrats fear this could create permanent Democratic minorities in the House and Senate.New polling by Lake Research Partners of 1,200 voters nationwide shows that strong majorities of Democrats, Republicans and independents strongly oppose cutting Social Security benefits to reduce the federal deficit.
“He’s probably listening to his economic team, who seem to hate the middle class and put all their time and effort into trying to satisfy Wall Street,” said Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.).
Read the full article at:
http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/138991-obama-dem-lawmakers-diverge-on-social-security--------------------------------------------
Democratic Pollsters: Social Security Overhaul Could Help — and Hurt
By John D. McKinnon
January 19, 2011
Proposing a Social Security overhaul in his State of the Union speech might improve President Barack Obama’s chances of holding onto the White House in 2012. But it could sink his party’s hopes of winning anything else, Democratic pollsters warned at a roundtable on Wednesday.
Reducing future Social Security benefits might appeal to some deficit-conscious suburbanites and independents, the analysts suggested. But it would multiply Democrats’ problems among seniors and blue-collar whites, two groups that already have turned against the party in recent election cycles.
“You may have a calculus… that says you can win a presidency based on the upscale suburbs or younger voters, but you cannot take back the House without doing better with seniors, and doing better with blue-collar whites,” said pollster Celinda Lake. “You cannot keep the Senate.”
The event was organized by the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, and highlighted Democratic strategists’ fears that they are losing a longstanding advantage among voters – especially seniors – on retirement-security issues.
Read the full article at:
http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2011/01/19/democratic-pollsters-social-security-overhaul-could-help-and-hurt/