At this point, there’s no apparent need to delve into national polls that have nothing to do with the presidential horserace. Most observers can pretty much guess the results without looking — support for Bush, the war, and the state of the economy are all pretty abysmal.
But Glenn Greenwald pointed to some interesting data from the latest WaPo/ABC poll that shouldn’t be dismissed too quickly. Poll respondents were asked which political party they trusted to do a better job on various issues:
* The economy: Dems led Republicans, 52% to 33%
* Immigration: Dems led Republicans, 40% to 37%
* Iraq: Dems led Republicans, 48% to 34%
* The budget deficit: Dems led Republicans, 52% to 31%
* Taxes: Dems led Republicans, 48% to 40%
* The U.S. campaign against terrorism: Dems led Republicans, 44% to 37%
* Health care: Dems led Republicans, 56% to 29%
First, these aren’t cherry-picked to make Dems look good; these were all of the issues polled. Republicans trailed in every category.
Second, in almost every instance, matters are getting worse for the GOP, not better. Especially on the question regarding terrorism, this was the worst Republicans have done on the issue since the WaPo began polling on the question after 9/11. Given that this is supposed to be the party’s signature issue, it’s not at all a good sign.
Given the results, Glenn suggested Dems should enter some of these policy disputes with a little more confidence.
From a purely political perspective, one would expect that Democrats would seek to highlight contrasts with such an unpopular and discredited party, not to emulate and capitulate to it. Republicans are distrusted across the board, and thus — as the 2006 election demonstrated (in which Karl Rove made Terrorism-exploitation the campaign’s centerpiece) — the GOP’s standard fear-mongering tactics and accusatory attacks are plainly impotent, even counter-productive.
Americans continue to turn against anything the Republicans touch. The most vivid example of that is public opinion on the Iraq War. Even with the press corps and Beltway elite insisting by consensus that the Glorious Surge has made everything so much better in Iraq — we’re finally winning! — and even as we were endlessly told that the war was only unpopular because we were losing, Americans hate the Iraq War more than ever before.
I’d love to think Dems would take Glenn’s advice, but I have a hunch some party leaders will look at the exact same poll numbers and think, “See? We’ve caved to a bunch of the administration’s demands, and as a result, the public trusts us more on every issue, across the board. Indeed, we’re exactly where we want to be in an election year. The answer, then, is to keep doing what we’re doing.”
It’s counterintuitive, I know, but I think I’m beginning to understand how the party establishment rationalizes ducking the hardest fights.