A slew of recent polling data points to a conclusion that might have seemed hard to believe amidst the town hall craziness in the dog days of August and early September: President Obama's numbers have not only stabilized but actually seem to be showing a modest uptick. And by several other measures the political landscape for Democrats isn't nearly as bleak as it was being portrayed just a few weeks ago.
To be sure, the evidence is insufficient to point to any dramatic, long-run Obama resurgence -- at least for now. But there's enough data to conclude that August, rather than being a public support train-wreck for the president was actually an inflection point, when the downward trend flattened out, and
in some cases began crawling back upward.
Presidential Approval
The numbers here all show that Obama's decline from his honeymoon period has essentially stopped -- and that he has leveled out in a solid territory.
Just a month ago, the talk had been about how Obama's approval rating had fallen from its prior, unnatural honeymoon highs. He'd reached 50% in Gallup, a key measure, and seemed ready to dip below 50% at any time.
But a funny thing happened: A further dip never happened. Instead, he leveled out and even seems to be enjoying a modest rebound.
A CBS/New York Times poll put him at 56%-33%, compared to 56%-35% in August. An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll has him at 51%-41%, compared to 51%-40% in August. A Fox News poll has him at 54%-39%, compared to 53%-40% in August.
The Economy
On the economy, Obama has either leveled out or even improved slightly.
Fox News puts Obama's approval at 55%-40% -- an improvement from Fox's July figure of 50%-43%. NBC/WSJ didn't show any significant improvement, but nor was there any degradation, with Obama at 50%-42% on the economy, compared to 49%-44% in July. CBS/NYT put him at 50%-40% on this, down slightly from 53%-41% in August, and essentially the same as 51%-41% in July -- and not really showing any statistically significant movement at all.
But public perceptions of the economy itself are equally telling and may serve as a leading indicator of the president's and his party's standing going into 2010. The public's perception of the overall economy is a key indicator in politics, which can have a serious impact on the incumbent party and the challengers -- just look at how there was a big swing to Obama last year, right when the market began to crash. Here, the perceptions are definitely improving. And that will be a key issue for the Democrats now that they're the ones in charge. The polls here show that the economy is certainly viewed as being bad -- but a growing number of people think it's starting to improve.
One question in the latest CBS/NYT poll suggests that the public is not only seeing improvements in the economy but may be connecting those improvements to President Obama's policies: "So far, do you think the government's stimulus package has made the economy better, made the economy worse, or has it had no impact on the economy so far?" The answer was 36% better, 13% worse, 46% no impact -- compared to a 25%-13%-57% split in August. Thus we have an 11-point swing from the no-impact column to the better column.
Health Care
As Charles Franklin has observed, the real story on health care reform in August and September was that an increase in opposition to reform that had been building up ended up stopping. Support for reform, which had been declining, ended up turning around and reaching parity with opposition.
On health care, the CBS/NYT poll gives a 47%-45% approval for Obama, up from 40%-47% in August. Fox has him at 44%-48%, compared to 43%-45% in July. NBC/WSJ is at 45%-46%, up from 41%-47% in August, and 41%-46% in July.
Congressional Ballot
The generic Congressional ballot very rarely shows truly drastic movement. But even here we some slight inflection. There certainly seemed to be a Republican surge in this number in August, catching up with the Democrats. But that effect has been wearing off, too.Here's the graph from Pollster:
Remaining Issues
It's not all good news, certainly. And the numbers do show that the opposition is much more solidly united in their views -- which could potentially feed into better voter motivation on their part. As one example, the NBC/WSJ poll finds only 20% believe the stimulus has begun improving the economy, to 38% who say it will not help the economy. Another 27% believe it has not yet improved the economy, but will do so in the future -- meaning that Obama and the Democrats still have to work hard to maintain the public's trust.
These numbers are all snapshots in time, and are always subject to future changes in both real events and the public's perception of those events. Even the phrasing of questions can have a big effect in terms of how they galvanize different sides or leave some people in the undecided column.
But all those caveats aside, while Republicans cast August as a grassroots uprising against Obama, there's been far from a revolution in public opinion. In fact, the available evidence suggests that Obama not only survived the assault, but may even have benefitted from it.

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tomanjeri
September 30, 2009 2:20 PM
Somebody may want to show this to Howard Fineman. See Mr. Fineman what happens when this President speaks directly to the people, he gets MORE popular.
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Chris
September 30, 2009 3:25 PM in reply to tomanjeri
Just be cautious with polling. It all can turn on a dime tomorrow. And remember, 25% is greatest president ever!
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The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
September 30, 2009 2:44 PM
The MSM is too locked into "boy, wouldn't be cool if the Republicans took back Congress in 2010 because that would be a great story" mode to let any pesky facts get in the way of their dreams of sweet, delicious, ratings-generating political trench warfare to come. However, I think the evidence is mounting that instead of being the Waterloo moment the Republicans had fantasized into existence, August was actually the month they jumped the shark. To the extent people had doubts, they looked at the teabaggers behaving like deranged lunatics on the teevee and said "jeez, look at those ignorant, hateful assclowns! Is that the side I want to be on?"
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Schmed
September 30, 2009 2:53 PM in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
The Republicans don't need to take back Congress, given the performance of congressional Democrats lately (see the votes on the public option amendments for ample illustration). All they have to do is let the Democrats carry on with "bipartisanship" and not voting for anything without a 60 (65 sez Nelson) vote majority.
The real story of 2010 would be the Rise of the Independent Party. If only the MSM could shake loose of their corporate fetters long enough to start pumping that action....
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_jonny_5_
September 30, 2009 3:04 PM in reply to Schmed
"If only the MSM could shake loose of their corporate fetters...."
Forget the MSM if Baucus and Conrad could, perhaps we'd be witnessing real HCR w/o all the 60 votes ass covering BS
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Schmed
September 30, 2009 3:25 PM in reply to _jonny_5_
No doubt.
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_jonny_5_
September 30, 2009 3:00 PM in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
No kidding, It seems that this has been the narrative they have been trying to cultivate since about the time Franken's victory was certified.
Liberal Media indeed...
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Xantar
September 30, 2009 4:24 PM in reply to The Commenter Formerly Known as NCSteve
It's sort of striking to remember that August last year was when McCain chose Sarah Palin. At the time, a lot of people thought that would deal a serious blow to the Obama campaign, but as it turned out, she dealt the finishing blow by driving away everybody who was still on the fence.
If this happens again next year, then August will officially become Pyrrhic Victory Month for the GOP.
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Will work for shoes
September 30, 2009 5:32 PM in reply to Xantar
It will be interesting to see who, if anyone, has Palin campaigning for him/her. I would think it would only be those in very conservative districts/states.
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brewmn61
September 30, 2009 2:46 PM
I'm guessing that the weekend talkers won't be using improving poll numbers as a point of focus for their roundtables. Doesn't fit the Beltway narrative.
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lapdogs
September 30, 2009 7:53 PM in reply to brewmn61
You mean George Will won't be pumping these numbers up? (snark)
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brewmn61
October 1, 2009 12:56 PM in reply to lapdogs
Not George Will - or anyone esle in the "liberal" media.
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numediaman
September 30, 2009 2:50 PM
Boy, if this were election time there would be a slew of posts complaining about how all these poll changes are well within the margin of error. Wake me up when they move three or four points.
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PeninsulaMatt
September 30, 2009 2:57 PM
The speech before a joint session of Congress worked!
Both in tone and frequency, the lies about healthcare reform coming from the right have dropped off. The President was direct with the country and the country listened.
The Republicans have a big problem on their hands as their "base" is scaring off the independents. Even as Obama does some things that generally scares off independents, like taking over the auto industry, he isn't completely losing their support because the alternative group seems to be filled with and lead by racist, extremist, liars.
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jeffgee
September 30, 2009 4:37 PM in reply to PeninsulaMatt
And the base gets crazier and scarier every day.
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xargaw
September 30, 2009 3:20 PM
The President can speak to the nation all he wants. Until he comes out definitively and strongly for a public option accessible to all Americans health care reform is nothing but a giveaway to the industry. If they pass ANYTHING without a strong public option, no matter how they try and spin it, it will be a failure. There is no cost control without a public option and the base knows it. It will be the end of Democratic majority. However, I am beginning to wonder what good the Democratic majority really means since they haven't the guts, or in some cases, the integrity to use it.
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rwc
September 30, 2009 11:38 PM in reply to xargaw
i agree
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Joe Markowitz
September 30, 2009 3:47 PM
The same thing happened in the 1960's. With all of the attention being paid to student protests and urban rioting, people might have thought that a vast uprising of people were turning against the government. But the majority of people who saw that protesting and rioting on television instead turned against the protesters and voted Richard Nixon into office, then re-elected him by a landslide in 1972. Now all of the attention being paid to a vocal minority of protesters at town hall meetings and marches on Washington might make people think there is a vast right wing resurgence on the march. Not so! In fact, the silent majority this time are backing the president. If anything, the protesters are turning most people off. People do not like loud, raucous, and impolite behavior. They are frightened by violence and disruption. When people see that kind of behavior, most of them turn against the protesters and turn toward the forces of order. Supporters of the Obama administration need to remember this, and make sure they do not respond to disruptive actions by the right in kind.
http://www.hopeandchange.net/2009/09/nixonland.html
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Shrubbit
September 30, 2009 3:52 PM
Hey Charlie Cook. YOU LIE!
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Shrubbit
September 30, 2009 3:55 PM
Winning Independents for the first time since August:
http://www.pollster.com/polls/us/jobapproval-obama-inds.php
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Shrubbit
September 30, 2009 3:57 PM in reply to Shrubbit
Oops, that's with high sensitivity (aka "more sensitive smoothing"). The average approval among indies (with high sensitivity selected) is: 47.7% approve, 46.4% disapprove.
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AnswerFrog
September 30, 2009 4:35 PM
Just goes to show that the pundit class still hasn't understood the watershed 2008 election. Even with all the race baiting, lies, fearmongering the GOP doled out, Obama won handily. Has america suddenly gone stupid in one year? I doubt it. The MSM has to learn that the usual GOP tricks and bullshit are NOT WORKING anymore, and stop hyping and playing them up.
MSM still acts like its 2004. How do we vote *these* bums out?
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Dr Zaius
September 30, 2009 5:28 PM
With 5 Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee (including Chairman Baucus) voting to make sure there is no public option, you can rest assured that the public option has flatlined and is not gonna be resuscitated. The Democrats will be better off among independent swing voters in next year's elections if a healthcare law is passed without a public option.
As for polls, the CBS/NYT poll is notoriously inaccurate (like it was in November 2008). The most accurate pollster in November 2008 was Rasmussen. He currently has Barack at 49% approval/51% disapproval among registered voters. Of course, there is lots of time between now and November 2010 and who knows what may swing votes in the final weeks. Remember how the Mark Foley sex scandal enhanced Democratic wins in 2006.
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Campesino
September 30, 2009 6:53 PM
You bet. Things are just getting better and better - if you only read the polls you agree with. What, me worry?
http://www.gallup.com/poll/123362/Independents-Lean-GOP-Party-Gap-Smallest-Since-05.aspx?CSTS=alert
Since Barack Obama took office as president in January, the Democratic advantage in leaned party identification has shrunk each quarter, from 13 points in the first quarter (52% to 39%) to 9 points in the second quarter (49% to 40%) and 6 points in the most recent quarter (48% to 42%)."
More Independents Lean GOP; Party Gap Smallest Since '05
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