Obama's Prestige, Job Approval Sinking Fast

RockX

Banned
President Obama's job approval rating has fallen to 47 percent in the latest Gallup poll, the lowest ever recorded for any president at this point in his term.

The new low comes as Obama enters the home stretch in his push to enact his signature initiative, an overhaul of the nation's health care system, and escalates America's involvement in the Afghanistan war.


Also today, the Obama administration has declared war on the Gallup polling organization.


Complete and total failure as a president.
 
people have now has 9 months of him stealing from the rich and giving to the poor; Robin Hood. Which is popular until you see the monthly decline in what they call rich to pay for the quadrupling of money to the lazy bumbs sucking on the working man's tit.
 
people have now has 9 months of him stealing from the rich and giving to the poor; Robin Hood. Which is popular until you see the monthly decline in what they call rich to pay for the quadrupling of money to the lazy bumbs sucking on the working man's tit.
Toppr, what would Webway know? He's a wing nut hack with the political acumen of a sea cucumber....I know...I know...I shouldn't be marginalizing sea cucumbers like that.
 
I know that the average community college grad looks like Einstien compared to webway.
Still like I said Obama has fallen short and his numbers are falling. Don't confuse that with me not wanting him at 100% approval rating. Half the stimulus is still left and he's going back to the till. I want him to get 4 to 6 % GDP and <8% unemployment. I do think they strategically left half the stimulus to 2010 for political reasons. I hope it works, but facts are facts.
 
I know that the average community college grad looks like Einstien compared to webway.
Still like I said Obama has fallen short and his numbers are falling. Don't confuse that with me not wanting him at 100% approval rating. Half the stimulus is still left and he's going back to the till. I want him to get 4 to 6 % GDP and <8% unemployment. I do think they strategically left half the stimulus to 2010 for political reasons. I hope it works, but facts are facts.
I agree that those are hard facts but they really had no choice, considering how infrastructure projects work. To build lag time into the stimulus. The projects worked on in 2009 were planned and budgeted previously. You'll see more of an impact from the stimulus funds in 2010 then in 2009 but it's a big question, will it be enough?
 
well he's going back to the till, so yes it will and they will get reelected. But the bill will be huge.
 
"Complete & total failure" is usually a judgment that is rendered after a few years, or a term.

Or, in Bush's case, after 2 terms.
 
I know that the average community college grad looks like Einstien compared to webway.
Still like I said Obama has fallen short and his numbers are falling. Don't confuse that with me not wanting him at 100% approval rating. Half the stimulus is still left and he's going back to the till. I want him to get 4 to 6 % GDP and <8% unemployment. I do think they strategically left half the stimulus to 2010 for political reasons. I hope it works, but facts are facts.

Pretty good numbers toppy....

GDP does need to hang around 6% for the next twelve months to put us back down into the 8% unemployment range.
 
I agree that those are hard facts but they really had no choice, considering how infrastructure projects work. To build lag time into the stimulus. The projects worked on in 2009 were planned and budgeted previously. You'll see more of an impact from the stimulus funds in 2010 then in 2009 but it's a big question, will it be enough?

It depends entirely on how they put the money to work. If they actually put the remaining funds INTO infrastructure projects, then it should provide a boost to employment.

The reasons why infrastructure projects work for the stimulus (as you are probably aware):

1) Every state has shovel ready projects that simply need funding

2) It increases labor demand at a time when other sectors are trying to get their feet under them.

3) If we were planning to spend 'x' dollars on infrastructure over the next ten years and we move all of 'x' into the next 3-5 years instead, then we are taking advantage of #2. As the labor market begins improving in other sectors of the market, these jobs will be winding down and thus we are less likely to get see inflationary pressures due to a tight labor market.

4) Infrastructure projects not only pay the employees building the bridges and roads, but also provide the stimulus to keep the companies that supply the necessary tools and products that go into those projects. So the steel, large equipment, cement etc... will also tend to see stabilization (and eventually growth as things ramp up).

Then the chain of stabilization continues. This is where I would have preferred to see the first chunk of the stimulus go because it has both short and long term benefits to the economy. (not to mention the fact that it makes our bridges/dams/levies/roads safer sooner)
 
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