Irrespective
of the uninspiring slate of Republican presidential candidates,
President Obama is facing a steep uphill reelection battle.
The
predicament of Obama's presidency was highlighted during its best
possible week - following the May 2, 2011 elimination of Bin Laden -
which produced a meager, soft a short-term bonus of 6%, bouncing Obama
to 52% approval rating, before sliding down towards 40%.
From a
69% approval rating "coattail President" on inauguration day, January
20, 2009, Obama collapsed to a 43% "anchor-chained President" on
November 13, 2011, according to Gallup. From 44%, Obama's strong nucleus
of support has shrunk to a meager 25%, while his strong nucleus of
opposition has expanded from 14% to 40%, according to the "Rasmussen
Report."
Compared with the approval rating of recent US Presidents
- during November of their third year in office - Obama is lagging
behind, along with his role-model, one-term President, Jimmy Carter:
G.W. Bush - 52%, Clinton - 53%, G.H. W. Bush - 55%, Reagan - 53%, Carter
- 40%, Nixon - 49%, JFK - 58% and Eisenhower - 78%. In fact, President
Obama's numbers are more concerning than those of non-elected President
Ford, who zoomed to 71% upon replacing the impeached President Nixon,
crashed to 50% upon pardoning Nixon and deteriorated to 47% following
the 1974 midterm election, remaining at 45%-50% until his defeat in the
November 1976 election.
Notwithstanding Obama's Nobel Prize for
Peace and 63% approval rating on countering-terrorism, a victory in
November 2012 depends, almost entirely, on his own domestic track
record, rather than his Republican challenger's track record. An Obama
victory would require a dramatic alteration of the current economic and
political landscape in the USA, or an "October Surprise." Barring an
exceptionally qualified, or disqualified, challenger, reelection
campaigns are the incumbent president's to win or to lose.
While
the power of incumbency provided sufficient tailwind for the reelection
of 21American presidents, the only three presidents who have lost a
second term bid since 1932 were hindered by a series of failures and/or
mishaps, not nearly as dramatic as those confronting Obama.
G.
H.W. Bush lost the 1992 reelection campaign, despite his glamorous
foreign policy posture, the collapse of the USSR during his term and the
astounding 88% approval rating following the 1991 Gulf War. He lost to
Clinton, a largely unknown governor of a small state, because of an
economic recession, 7% unemployment and $290BN deficit (4.7% of GDP),
the broken pledge of "read my lips, no new taxes," the effectiveness of
"it's the economy stupid," the rising violence in inner cities and his
well-known preference of international - over domestic - issues.
Jimmy
Carter lost his 1980 reelection campaign to Reagan whose qualifications
were in doubt. Carter lost, regardless of his image as a global
peacemaker, due to an economic slowdown which was intensified by a
global energy crisis, surging inflation and interest rates, and a
general sense of national despair and pessimism, fueled by Carter's own
style and the humiliating hostage-taking of the US embassy staff in
Teheran.
Gerald Ford lost the 1976 reelection campaign to "Jimmy
Who?" (Carter), a semi-anonymous governor of a southern State. Ford lost
in spite of ending the Vietnam War and advancing détente with the USSR
and China. He lost due to his pardoning of Nixon, the adverse effects of
the Nixon-caused national trauma, the depressed economy, high inflation
and the chronic energy shortages.
Just like the three one-termers, during their fourth year, Obama has no lock on his reelection.
In
2008, candidate Obama ran as a centrist, and therefore carried the
independent sector, which is the most critical voting bloc - about a
third of the constituents. In 2008, he was supported by 62% of
independents, compared with 39% in November, 2011. In 2008, Obama was
supported by Collin Powell and other moderate Republicans, in 2011 he is
perceived as a liberal, while most constituents are center and
right-of-center. Self-identified conservatives outnumber liberals 2:1
and most Democrats are not liberal. In 2008, the turnout of young and
Afro-American voters peaked as a result of peaked expectations. In 2011,
the turnout is expected to diminish to the lower traditional levels, as
a result of a peaked disappointment. In 2008, liberal constituents were
charged with unprecedented enthusiasm. In 2011, Gallup documents the
highest number of conservative voters since 1994, exceeding the number
of moderates and twice as many as liberals. In 2008, 78% of American
Jews voted for Obama. In 2011, there is a growing disenchantment among
the Jewish electorate with Obama's policy, in general, and policy toward
Israel, in particular. The 2010 reapportionment has netted the "McCain
States" twelve electorates, in addition to the pick-up of two
electorates by Florida, which could switch-over to the Republican
column, along with other "battleground" states such as Ohio, Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Indiana, Colorado, Nevada, Virginia and even New Jersey,
where Obama's popularity is plunging.
Most importantly, "it's the
economy stupid!" No American president has been reelected, since 1960,
with unemployment above 7.2%, especially when experiencing a 9%+
unemployment, a "U-shaped" economic meltdown, a paralyzing sense of
uncertainty, a possible double-dip, a collapse of the housing market, a
staggering price at the pump, a shrinking disposable income, high
inflation rates, a shaky stock market, no real GDP growth, an all time
high debt, which approaches GDP.
Democrats on Capitol Hill
constitute an effective barometer of Obama's electoral fortunes. They
are reluctant to support his initiatives, since they are apprehensive
about a possible reoccurrence of their 2010 midterm devastation, which
was caused by the Obama-Effect.
Irrespective of the aforementioned
steep hurdles on the path of Obama to reelection, he could still win
reelection, provided that dramatic developments occur before November
2012.
Ambassador (ret.) Yoram Ettinger
The Ettinger Report
"Second Thought: A US-Israel Initiative"
First published in "Israel Hayom" Newsletter, November 17, 2011