PRESIDENT'S POPULARITY DROPPING
Recent polls indicate that President Bush is becoming an increasingly unpopular President. Fred Barnes writing in the Weekly Standard has the best explanation I have seen for the President's dropping poll numbers.
TO UNDERSTAND WHY President Bush is relatively unpopular, one only has to look to the case of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California. After his election in November 2003, Schwarzenegger experienced a political honeymoon. He governed mostly by compromise and without pushing for sweeping change. And his popularity, measured by how people feel about his performance as governor, soared. That lasted for more than a year. Now Schwarzenegger has gotten serious. He's called for a special election to limit government spending permanently, curb teacher tenure, and take redistricting out of the hands of the legislature, which is controlled by Democrats. His popularity has plummeted.
Bush's popularity dropped in 2003 after the terrorist insurgency spread in Iraq. And except for a blip or two, it hasn't risen significantly since, even after his effective campaigning last fall, his reelection, and his dazzling inaugural address. Instead, his job performance rating in the Gallup Poll has dipped further--from 52 percent in January to 47 percent now.
Bush doesn't have the second-term blues, his administration hasn't lost its zeal, and he hasn't been troubled by scandal or the lack of a clear policy agenda. Nor is he suffering solely from his single-minded pursuit of Social Security reform. Like Schwarzenegger, the president has taken on a string of big issues--Iraq, a drastic foreign-policy overhaul, judges, plus Social Security--with predictable results. These are issues that generate political conflict. They upset settled practice, rile various institutions, stir strong opposition, and keep poll ratings low. For an activist president, lack of popularity is part of the package.
The safest way to remain popular as a politician (unless the economy is in seriously bad shape) is to do very little. Social Security crisis? Nah. Health Care crisis? Nah. Energy crisis? Nah. The list goes on. This administration is to be credited for tackling a number of important issues, sometimes in a bold manner. That said, the President can also be criticized for not taking action on a number of fronts. This is true of all administrations. You have to pick your battles. The fewer you choose to fight, the better your poll numbers. It is sad, but very human.
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