Friday, October 4, 2013

FOXNews.com: Throw the bums out? Budget deadlock portends 2014 backlash

FOXNews.com
FOX News Network - We Report. You Decide. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Fun with Brazilian Portuguese

Learn the tips and tricks to speak colloquial Portuguese in a natural and confident manner. Enroll today for just $69!
From our sponsors
Throw the bums out? Budget deadlock portends 2014 backlash
Oct 4th 2013, 13:19

Published October 04, 2013

FoxNews.com

While the House and Senate are pointing fingers at each other over the budget impasse, new polling suggests they all could have a lot to lose if the stalemate doesn't end soon. 

Despite a robust campaign by Democrats to pin the blame exclusively on their GOP colleagues, the American public appears fed up with just about every elected member from 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. to the Capitol dome. 

The public sentiment should bring a sense of foreboding for any lawmaker seeking re-election in 2014, with evidence mounting of an anti-incumbent backlash in the making. 

Newly released Fox News polls show Congress' approval rating is 13 percent. President Obama's is better, but still not great for a recently re-elected president, at 45 percent. And more people disapprove than approve of either party, though the numbers for Republicans are worse. 

As for the budget stalemate, while lawmakers appear to be hunkering down for a long fight, voters are worried it will have a serious impact on them. Fifty-eight percent said they see the partial shutdown as "very" serious

And neither party is escaping blame. 

A quarter of voters blame "Republican leaders such as John Boehner," while another 17 percent blame Tea Party Republicans such as Ted Cruz." 

But 24 percent point the finger at Obama. Eight percent blame "Democratic leaders such as Harry Reid." 

And another 20 percent blame everybody in Washington. 

In the shutdowns of 1995-1996, Republicans were mostly blamed in the end, and suffered at the polls. With that experience as the backdrop, Obama and his Democratic allies are making a hard push to paint Republicans with the shutdown brush once again - using the phrase "Republican government shutdown" with regularity. 

The president is noticeably trying to insulate his side from a political backlash. 

"I want to make sure everybody understands this because, again, sometimes the tendency is to say, well, both sides are at fault," Obama said at a rally Thursday in Rockville, Md. "This one has nothing to do with deficits or spending or budgets. ... This whole thing is about one thing. The Republican obsessions with dismantling the Affordable Care Act and denying affordable health insurance to millions of Americans."   

Democrats, though, may be overconfident. One unnamed senior administration official told The Wall Street Journal that "we are winning. ... it doesn't really matter to us" how long the impasse lasts. 

But both parties are bound to feel the political pain if this drags on for weeks. Roughly 800,000 government workers are on furlough without pay, and more are working without pay. Government worker unions could apply increasing pressure on Washington, as well as unions representing contractors and others affected by the government slowdown - particularly if the budget impasse comes crashing into the deadline to raise the debt ceiling. 

No end is in sight, with Obama saying he will not negotiate with Republicans over a short-term spending bill and Republicans demanding ObamaCare-related concessions. House Republicans, meanwhile, are plowing ahead with a series of votes on mini-spending bills for certain priorities, but Senate Democrats are vowing to block them. 

On the Republican side, state-level Republicans are starting to distance themselves from their Washington counterparts, hoping to steer clear of any voter rebellion. 

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal wrote this week that he won't allow the GOP "to be defined by the dysfunction in Washington." 

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has also blasted the spectacle in Washington.

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.