Thursday, November 12, 2015

Trump, Carson, Cruz


Trump, Carson, and Cruz may have turned Republican voters against the party


Months of denouncing congressional Republican leaders by rank-and-file members and top-tier GOP presidential candidates may be taking a toll, as a new survey finds Republican voters are more disgusted than anyone else with how Washington is being run.
Congress’s approval rating has slipped to 11 percent, its lowest level this year, according to a poll released by Gallup on Wednesday. That’s just two points higher than the all-time low of 9 percent in November 2013 after the last government shutdown.

While troubling, the figure that should alarm Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and newly installed House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) – or any GOP incumbent – is only 8 percent of Republicans approve of the job they’re doing.
That’s less than independents, with 13 percent, and even less than Democrats, at 11 percent. The anemic level of support is one point shy of the 9 percent Republican voters gave the Democratic-led Congress at the time of the 2010 midterm elections, according to Gallup.

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“Usually, Congress' approval ratings are significantly higher among supporters of the majority party,” the survey notes.
That was true at the beginning of the year, when the GOP had won back control of the Senate and 27 percent of Republicans approved of their representatives in Washington, but that number has steadily eroded since February.
GallupOne reason for the decline could be the incredible influence political outsiders seem to hold over the GOP right now. Real-estate mogul Donald Trump and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, neither of whom have ever held elected office, are dominating the Republican presidential primary.
Recent polls show the duo eclipsing veteran politicians like former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Ohio Governor John Kasich by double digits. Other contenders, including some who currently serve in Washington, have taken notice and made railing on Republican leaders a cornerstone of their campaigns.
For months, Trump has been calling America’s leadership “stupid,” “incompetent,” and that they’re “ripping off Americans.” His rants may be wearing thin by now, but the message stuck.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in particular has made a habit of bashing what he calls the Washington “cartel” that stifles conservatives and used the debate podium, and the Senate floor, to go after McConnell. His steadily rising poll numbers suggest the strategy is paying off.
Cruz stuck to his script during Tuesday night’s GOP debate, repeatedly bashing the capital’s “crony” culture.
Other hopefuls, like Sen. Rand Paul (KY), New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, added to the anti-Washington narrative. But it was an answer by former U.S. senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania that best captured the anger roiling the party right now.

Asked during the so-called undercard debate who in the Democratic Party he admired, Santorum replied, "You know who I respect in the Democratic Party? You know why I respect them? Because they fight!” he shouted. "Because they're not willing to back down, and they're willing to stand up and fight and win. And so I respect them because they are willing to take it to us!"


That sense of disappointment could be another reason for the ebbing enthusiasm among Republicans, who thought that having control of both chambers of Congress would lead to legislative victories on issues like the Keystone XL pipeline, repealing some or all of Obamacare, and, more recently, cutting federal dollars for Planned Parenthood.
Instead, Republicans have had their priorities filibustered by Senate Democrats or vetoed by President Obama.
The frustration voiced by Santorum and other 2016 candidates could have easily been espoused by any one of the roughly 40 members of the House Freedom Caucus. The hard-right group helped drive Ryan’s predecessor, John Boehner, into early retirement because they thought he didn’t stand up for their values and was too eager to cut deals with the White House on issues like the debt ceiling.
The Gallup poll, taken days after Ryan was given the gavel and Congress approved a budget deal that set federal budget numbers through 2017 and raised the nation’s debt limit, shows the Wisconsin lawmaker has his work cut out for him.

Asked during the so-called undercard debate who in the Democratic Party he admired, Santorum replied, "You know who I respect in the Democratic Party? You know why I respect them? Because they fight!” he shouted. "Because they're not willing to back down, and they're willing to stand up and fight and win. And so I respect them because they are willing to take it to us!"
That sense of disappointment could be another reason for the ebbing enthusiasm among Republicans, who thought that having control of both chambers of Congress would lead to legislative victories on issues like the Keystone XL pipeline, repealing some or all of Obamacare, and, more recently, cutting federal dollars for Planned Parenthood.
Instead, Republicans have had their priorities filibustered by Senate Democrats or vetoed by President Obama.
The frustration voiced by Santorum and other 2016 candidates could have easily been espoused by any one of the roughly 40 members of the House Freedom Caucus. The hard-right group helped drive Ryan’s predecessor, John Boehner, into early retirement because they thought he didn’t stand up for their values and was too eager to cut deals with the White House on issues like the debt ceiling.
The Gallup poll, taken days after Ryan was given the gavel and Congress approved a budget deal that set federal budget numbers through 2017 and raised the nation’s debt limit, shows the Wisconsin lawmaker has his work cut out for him.

1 comment:

  1. Something doesn't add up to me. He highlights some interesting stuff, but I don't think he explains it well. Despite displeasure with congress, Republican voters gave their party even MORE power. I'm not sure I understand that. Democrat voters seem to complain just as much, yet, they couldn't be bothered to show up in the mid terms. The Republicans accomplished next to nothing, IE little cuts in spending, modest cuts in social programs, and so on and when it really mattered, Boehner went completely around them to pass a spending bill that gave Paul Ryan a get out of jail free card. I'm just confused about what Matishak is reading in this.

    As for Santorum, I thought his outburst was a little odd. I personally don't think the Democrats have taken it to the Republicans on any issue really. I think he is trying to convince people that it's somehow the Democrat's fault that Trump and Carson are leading rather than a true conservative like himself, and to me, he and Sanders are probably just about the most honest candidates up there, and yet, neither party wants to elevate the candidate that has a lifelong history of supporting what they say they support.

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