What's Obama doing to try to fire up drooping Democrats?
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President Obama and the Democrats are facing the possibility of big losses in the coming 2010 midterm elections. With the vote now only a few weeks away, how is Mr. Obama trying to fire up his party for the fall?
He鈥檚 the head of the party, after all, despite all those GOP bumper stickers urging voters to 鈥淔ire Nancy Pelosi.鈥 If Republicans win control of both the House and Senate, the next two years could be very tough ones for the administration. So it鈥檚 his job, politically speaking, to get out there and try to raise the spirits of disgruntled and apathetic Dems.
Well, what he鈥檚 done this week is break out of the White House grounds. Wednesday morning he鈥檚 in Des Moines, Iowa, in the back yard of Jeff and Sandy Clubb, answering questions from 70 of their neighbors. (Have they been screened to try to keep people from asking embarrassing questions, such as the one Obama fielded at a similar event earlier this week about why he鈥檚 a 海角大神? We鈥檇 say, "you betcha.")
Later Wednesday he鈥檒l be in Richmond, Va., for another cozy backyard event. Just you, the folks from the block, and dozens of Secret Service agents wearing suits and earplugs.
Mixed in with these chats was Tuesday鈥檚 big rally at the University of Wisconsin, in Madison. From a media relations perspective, the White House has gone low/high: intimate settings that attempt to show the president as a real person, combined with big events that have something of that old rock star glamour (for which the GOP criticized him in 2008) and that allow Obama to try to outline a message intended to prod yawning Democrats to the polls.
What is that message? If you look at what Obama鈥檚 said this week, it has a number of interlocking parts.
You're a shareholder. In his Madison address, the president began by framing his 2008 election as the result of his supporters overcoming the status quo to elect a skinny guy with a funny name. His implicit message was that the supporters thus share in the responsibility for what happens to the administration.
鈥淓very single one of you is a shareholder in that mission of rebuilding our country and reclaiming our future. And I鈥檓 back here today because on November 2, we face another test,鈥 said Obama.
The midterm's not a referendum on me. Midterm elections, generally speaking, are seen by voters as referendums on the party in power. Are they doing a good job? If not, let鈥檚 throw them out 鈥 or, least those who are up for reelection.
But in Madison, Obama tried to change this view. He said the vote was still partly about Republican policies of the past. The 鈥渇ailed policies鈥 of the past helped create the economic crisis, said Obama. The GOP leadership in Congress has been content to just sit back and let the administration deal with the problems 鈥渢hat they had done so much to create,鈥 he said.
Change is still out there. At the big Wisconsin rally, Obama listed what he said were his administration鈥檚 accomplishments, such as the passage of health-care reform and Wall Street reform legislation. He said he figures he鈥檚 covered 鈥渁bout 70 percent鈥 of the checklist with which he came into office.
But the tone of Washington is as harsh as ever, and according to polls many voters don鈥檛 think Obama has brought about the radical change in the nation鈥檚 political process that he promised in his presidential race.
Well, said Obama, we鈥檙e bringing about change, but it鈥檚 hard, and you need to stick with me. 鈥淐hange is going to come, if we still work for it, if we still fight for it,鈥 Obama said
Will this work? Well, it鈥檚 almost certain that the Democrats are going to lose a lot of House seats, so what鈥檚 at issue is not so much victory as a softening of the loss. There is some evidence, too, that voters still view Republicans as partly to blame for the economic crisis, meaning they might not view the election as solely a referendum on Obama. A recent found that 56 percent of respondents believe that the president inherited the current problems with the economy.
But only 42 percent of respondents in the NBC survey approve of how Obama has handled the economy he inherited. Other poll data, from surveys about whether the country is on the right or wrong track, to the question of whether voters prefer to vote for generic Democratic or GOP congressional candidates, all point to a Republican wave in November, according to polling expert Steve Lombardo, who worked for President George H.W. Bush.
鈥淲e are seeing an intensifying political storm that for Democrats is the electoral equivalent of a catastrophic hurricane,鈥 wrote Mr. Lombardo in .