As conservative columnist Jeff Jacoby writes in the Boston Globe: "Running to succeed the deeply polarizing George W. Bush, Obama held himself out not just as a leader who would never 'pit red America against blue America,' but as a natural-born manager whose hallmark was smarts and competence."
Which is what makes the series of problems within his administration
of late all the more politically problematic for Democrats trying to
hold onto their Senate majority — and narrow their House minority — this
November. The current scandal engulfing the VA is the latest example of
competence questions surrounding this White House, but they include
everything from the rollout of HealthCare.gov to the targeting of tea
party groups by a Cincinnati IRS office. While none of these problems
are easily tied directly to a decision Obama made (or didn't make), they
have all eroded the public's faith that he knows what he's doing.
The collapse is striking. In CNN/Opinion Research Corp. polling in
December 2008, more than three quarters of Americans said that the
phrase "can manage the government effectively" applied to Obama; by
March 2014 — before the VA debacle — just 43 percent said the same. A
late 2013 Washington Post/ABC poll found a similar result, with just
41 percent of respondents saying that Obama "is a good manager." And polling by Pew also gets to this competence erosion. Here's their table on the question of whether Obama is able to get things done or not.
"I think that confidence in government competence started to be
undermined with the war in Iraq and Katrina, the collapse of the economy
and the roll-out of the [Affordable Healthcare Act]," said Anna
Greenberg, a Democratic pollster. "It's hard to see how it gets much
worse."
Maybe not. But Obama's numbers on competence are
already low enough to trouble many party strategists charged with
electing (or reelecting) Democrats to the Senate and the House. In
conversations over the past several weeks with these folks, it's become
clear that worries over Obamacare specifically have given way to a
broader concern that the combination of the pained rollout of
HealthCare.gov, coupled with the problems at the VA and other motivators
of the Republican base (IRS, Benghazi), could combine into a toxic
"This guy (and his party) don't know what they're doing" message this
fall.
It's not clear whether Republicans have picked up on the "competence
trumps all" message. The party does appear to be moving away from its
insistence on the repeal
of the Affordable Care Act to a less absolute position focused instead
on replacing parts of the law that they believe don't/won't work.
And Republicans like Mitch McConnell have made quite clear that they
believe their path to victory lies in tying their opponent to Obama. (Full Story)
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