This week’s polling data looks a lot like last week’s numbers. But it’s worth remembering that this is more than just an academic exercise.
* Washington Post/ABC News poll has Bush’s approval rating at 42%, the lowest of his presidency.
* Newsweek has Bush’s approval rating at 38%, the lowest of his presidency.
* Time has Bush’s approval rating at 42%, the lowest of his presidency.
* Pew Research Center has Bush’s approval rating at 40%, tied for the lowest of his presidency.
But if the president isn’t running for another term, how does his unpopularity affect his presidency? By emboldening Dems on the Hill.
With Republican poll numbers falling and the nation focusing increasingly on domestic policy, House Democrats are feeling new political confidence and taking on a rare offensive posture against the GOP.
Through mid-August, Democrats were feeling emboldened as public confidence dipped in the U.S. handling of the Iraqi conflict, Social Security reform and Congressional ethics. Then Hurricane Katrina brought mounting questions about the Bush administration’s response to the disaster.
“Hurricane Katrina has certainly changed the political landscape in the short term,” said one Democratic leadership aide. “Whether it does in the long term is another question.”
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was the first to call on Congress to return to session early to pass a relief package for the disaster area and led her party’s call for Michael Brown, the then-director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to step aside. Democrats were also quick to call for Congressional hearings and for a push back on the regular agenda to make room for Katrina-related legislation.
This week, Pelosi will lead the Democratic assault once again, scheduling at least three events on key issues on which Democrats charge the GOP has faltered. Democrats also will continue to raise questions about the Republican management of the federal government at a time when many Americans are looking for assistance.
I know many grassroots Dems want to see this kind of aggressive style all the time, but it seems Bush’s plummeting support brings out the fighter in the Dem caucus.
A top Dem House aide said, “When [Bush is] weak, he can’t beat us up and call us obstructionists. He’s not in a position of strength.” That’s true. Ideally, Dems wouldn’t care quite this much whether Bush is calling them obstructionists or not, but it seems to be some kind of collective personality quirk. When a popular president is calling them names, Dems fret; when a 38%-support president calls them names, Dems shrug it off.
In either case, Dems are looking ahead with a plan to highlight how the Democratic approach to government is the ideal for these times.
…Democrats can strike hard against the GOP on core domestic issues including Social Security, federal assistance to disaster victims, the economy and ethics.
A senior Democratic aide said the test for the party and of its strength will really come in the months ahead.
“All four of those issues give Democrats a perfect opportunity to paint the ‘us versus them’ picture,” this staffer said. “This is what Democrats are about. It’s a matter of do we capitalize on it.”
Stay tuned.