Tennesseans disapprove of Congress even more
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — On the eve of a rare visit to the state of
Tennessee by President Barack Obama, a majority of the state’s residents
disapprove of the job he is doing, according to an MTSU Poll taken this past
weekend.
The
news is even worse for Congress, with only 14 percent of Tennesseans approving
of its performance.
A
55 percent majority disapprove of the job Obama is doing while only 30 percent
approve. These figures are a few percentage points worse for Obama compared to
spring 2013, the last time the poll measured Obama’s job approval statewide.
But the difference is not statistically significant, so the decline since last
spring may be due to random sampling variation. The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.
Viewed
across all of the president’s years in office, though, the president’s approval
numbers show a slow and steady drop, according to Dr. Jason Reineke, associate
director of the poll at Middle Tennessee State University. The poll’s margin of
error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.
“Although
the year-to-year differences are rarely significant, there is a clear trend in
approval for President Obama going from bad to worse in Tennessee over time,” Reineke
said. “In other words, while the number of Tennesseans who disapprove of the
job Obama is doing has held fairly steady, approval has noticeably softened
over the course of his presidency.”
Unsurprisingly,
political party affiliation was the best predictor of Obama’s presidential job
approval.
• However,
approval of Obama has fallen to 66 percent among Tennessee’s self-identified Democrats, down from 77 percent among
the same group in spring of 2013.
• Among
Tennessee’s self-identified Republicans,
87 percent disapprove, comparable to the 84 percent who said the same in spring
of 2013.
• A
57 percent majority of those who say that they are politically independent disapprove of the job Obama is doing as president,
much like the 55 percent who said the same about a year ago.
Difference by race
If
political party affiliation — which is determined in large part by evaluations
of the president — is set aside, the most important difference in presidential
approval in Tennessee is attributable to race.
Among
whites, 64 percent disapprove, while only 21 percent approve, and the rest say
they don’t know or refuse to answer the question. Among African-Americans in
Tennessee, 81 percent say they approve of the job Obama is doing as president,
while only 12 percent say they disapprove.
Congress even worse
However,
the U.S. Congress receives an even worse evaluation from Tennesseans. Fully 72
percent of Tennesseans say that they disapprove of the way that the U.S. Congress
is handling its job, while only 14 percent approve.
“Tennesseans
express an overwhelming disapproval for the U.S. Congress, by a margin of more
than 5-to-1 over those who say that they approve,” said Reineke. “Furthermore,
this disapproval exists across the board — among men and women, blacks and
whites, Democrats, Republicans, and Independents — far more disapprove of how
Congress is handling its duties than approve.”
Poll
data were collected prior to the State of the Union address, from Jan. 23–26,
via telephone interviews of 600 Tennessee adults conducted by Issues and
Answers Network Inc. using balanced, random samples of Tennessee landline and
cell phones. The data were weighted to match the latest available Census
estimates of gender and race proportions in Tennessee.
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