Rasmussen: Polls show Reaganism is not dead

by Infidelesto on November 10, 2008 · View Comments

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Scott Rasmussen writes at the Wall Street Journal

During Reagan’s campaign, the nation suffered from high unemployment and high inflation. This time around, data from the Rasmussen Reports Daily Presidential Tracking Poll showed that Mr. Obama took command of the race during the 10 days following the collapse of Lehman Brothers — when the Wall Street meltdown hit Main Street. Before that event John McCain was leading nationally by three percentage points. Ten days later Mr. Obama was up by five and never relinquished his lead.

Mr. Obama’s tax-cutting message played a key role in this period of economic anxiety. Tax cuts are well-received at such times: 55% of voters believe they are good for the economy. Only 19% disagree and see them as bad policy.

Down the campaign homestretch, Mr. Obama’s tax-cutting promise became his clearest policy position. Eventually he stole the tax issue from the Republicans. Heading into the election, 31% of voters thought that a President Obama would cut their taxes. Only 11% expected a tax cut from a McCain administration.

The last Democratic candidate to win the tax issue was also the last Democratic president — Bill Clinton. In fact, the candidate who most credibly promises the lowest level of taxes has won every presidential election in at least the last 40 years.

But while Mr. Obama was promising to cut taxes, the Bush administration took the lead on a $700 billion, taxpayer-backed bailout bill — with very little marketing finesse. Few Americans supported the bailout, and a majority of voters were more concerned that the government would do too much rather than too little. In terms of getting the economy going again, 58% said that more tax cuts would better stimulate the economy than new government spending.

A Rasmussen survey conducted Oct. 2 found that 59% agreed with the sentiment expressed by Reagan in his first inaugural address: “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” Just 28% disagreed with this sentiment. That survey also found that 44% of Obama voters agreed with Reagan’s assessment (40% did not). And McCain voters overwhelmingly supported the Gipper.

The real challenge for the new president will be attempting to govern with a message that resonates with most voters but divides his own party. Consider that 43% of voters view it as a positive to describe a candidate as being like Reagan, while just 26% consider it a negative. Being compared to Reagan rates higher among voters than being called “conservative,” “moderate,” “liberal” or “progressive.” Except among Democrats, that is. Fifty-one percent of Democrats view that Reagan comparison as a negative. There’s Mr. Obama’s dilemma in a nutshell.

Mr. Obama won the White House promising tax cuts, but he will be governing with a Democratic Congress bursting with desire for a more activist government. As he faces this challenge, he might remember the fate of another man who made taxes the central part of his campaign: the first President Bush, whose most memorable campaign line — “Read my lips, no new taxes” — was as central to his victory as Mr. Obama’s promise to cut taxes for 95% of Americans. George H.W. Bush famously reneged on that promise. Voters rejected his bid for a second term.

Mr. Obama ran like Reagan. Will he be able to govern that way, too?

Read the whole thing

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  • Chris

    Is that last sentence a joke?

  • http://infidelsarecool.com Infidelesto

    not if your read the context of the article.  

    Of course Obama will not be able to govern the way Reagan did.  Reagan ran on a campaign promising tax cuts.  Obama ran his campaign the same way with his “95% tax cut for all Americans” lie that is nothing more than a plan for redistributing the wealth.  The American people love the sound of “95% tax cut for all Americans” and Obama bamboozled the American people.  IT’s a feel good notion that Obama will be like Reagan but the reality is that Obama wants to grow government and Reagan wanted to reduce it. 

    Reagan: “Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

  • jennyjen

    “The best social program is a JOB!”- my fave Reagan quote

  • Chris

    I was just pointing out that we all know the answer to the last sentence.

  • http://infidelsarecool.com Infidelesto

    Chris, lol my bad

  • Tonto (USA)

      I don’t know that the Bush Admin “took the lead” in the bailout.  I think it was “strongly suggested” by the Dem congress and the bone heads in the White House went for it to get them off their backs.  So far it’s seems to be a flop, but is it just not as effective as we thought it would be and it’s just keeping the bottom from falling out completely?  The execs at AIG are pissing everybody off with their expensive getaways as if they still had millions from us suckers to play with.  Excessive greed on the part of execs and CEOs is what got us here anyway.  With Bush, the Market went WAAAAAAY up, productivity went up, profits went up and employment went up.  Wages stayed the same or went down, except for the wages and bonuses for the upper echelons.  And there you have it.  The core belief that got Obamalamadingdong elected.  McCain acted like a limp dick has been with no fire or flare.  Palin got repressed because she was outdoing McCains absolutely flat performance.  McCain was as exciting as watching grass grow.  ‘Bama played it like a rock star.  All act and no substance.  I really wonder where his handlers want him to go with it.  And yes sportsfans, it sure is obvious he’s been “handled” since college.  Just like Gore, just like Kerry.  Secret SDS grads all the way.  ‘Bama has some serious movers behind him, but he, himself, is on strings.  Bunker up y’all.  Incomming!!!

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