Funny side of politics: The Washington Post reports that, “Republicans had hoped to win the House by tying Democrats to an unpopular former Democratic president, Bill Clinton, and that approach was derailed in 2010 when Republicans tried to oust Clinton on grounds that he had tried to steer President Obama’s health care law away from moderate Republicans.” As the Huffington Post’s Jennifer Bendery writes:
For the Obama administration, the 2010 election wasn’t an anomaly but a direct challenge to the idea that the White House is still controlled by the same set of interests and interests groups, particularly white men. In their desperate attempts to prevent a split in the party, GOP congressional leaders created a plan for an eventual split in the House if Obama won. Instead, the Republicans made an issue of whether or not they would have won an au코인 카지노tomatic block to the Affordable Care Act, or a continuing resolution to fund government.
The latest poll by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), which was conducted last spring, indicates that this is no longer a question that voters are conside홀덤ring when considering an issue. As a result, a majority of Republicans think the same of Obama.
The PRRI survey, for example, asked: “Do you approve or disapprove of the way President Obama is handling his job or his job performance, with or without help from Congress?” This poll’s numbers are comparable to earlier survey results, as both showed substantial improvement.
The latest PRRI/Washington Post poll found that Republicans are also becoming less worried about a possible presidential election in 2016. However, Republicans still think Obama will make good on his promise to change course on a whole host of foreign and domestic policy issues, including his position on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Iran nuclear deal, climate change, and the environment.
Republican pollster Frank Luntz, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, notes that the party “has been very hesitant in talking about the 2016 election because if it had focused on that issue, the race would be won by Obama over [Hillary Clinton] in Iowa. We’대전 출장 안마re not doing that with the issue of immigration. If I were running the GOP this fall, I’d emphasize the issue of immigration as a whole. We have a big challenge ahead. The issue is big enough to keep the focus on.
“For example, there’s a lot of money at stake here. For the first time in a long time, we’ve seen very strong numbers for the president on immigration issues, because you do not want somebody who wants the wall to come i