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Half Say Obama Too Liberal
Topic Started: Feb 24 2012, 08:48 PM (180 Views)
Jim Miller
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Fire & Ice Senior Diplomat
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But, but, Tom says he is moved to the center.

Quote:
 
Half Say Obama Too Liberal

PRINCETON, NJ -- A slim majority of Americans, 51%, say Barack Obama's political views are "too liberal," a greater percentage than believe either of his main Republican challengers -- Rick Santorum (38%) or Mitt Romney (33%) -- is "too conservative." Americans are about equally as likely to say the views of Romney and Santorum are too conservative as "about right." Slightly more say Romney's views are too liberal than say this about Santorum.

For each of the following candidates, please say whether you think his political views are too conservative, about right, or too liberal. February 2012 results
See all election 2012 data

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Notably, the percentage of Americans who say each candidate's views are "about right" is nearly identical in the Feb. 16-19 poll.

Americans' perceptions of Obama's ideology have changed significantly since he was elected. Four years ago, when Gallup first asked this question about Obama while he was competing for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, a plurality, 47%, thought his views were about right. At that time, 37% said his views were too liberal, compared with today's 51%.

The perceptions that Obama is too extreme to the left of the ideological spectrum than his competitors are to the right are likely due to three factors. First, Americans are more familiar with Obama than with either of his challengers, as evidenced by the smaller percentage without an opinion of Obama's political views (4%) compared with Romney's (9%) or Santorum's (13%).

Second, for many years Americans have been roughly twice as likely to self-identify as conservative rather than liberal. Thus, the odds are probably greater that a Democratic politician would be perceived as too liberal than that a Republican candidate would be perceived as too conservative.

Third, Republicans overwhelmingly believe Obama is too liberal (89%), while Democrats show far less consensus as to whether Romney (55%) and Santorum (50%) are too conservative.

Also, independents are much more likely to perceive Obama as being too liberal (50%) than to perceive either Republican as being too conservative.

Sixty-nine percent of Democrats say Obama's views are about right, slightly more than the 61% of Republicans who say the same about both Romney and Santorum. Republicans do diverge in their views of the rivals for their party's nomination, though, with 25% saying Romney is too liberal (compared with 5% for Santorum), and 24% saying Santorum is too conservative (compared with 9% for Romney).

Perceptions of Candidates' Political Views, by Political Party, February 2012

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Americans No Less Likely to Say They Agree With Obama on Issues

Although Americans tend to perceive Obama as too far to the left, when asked whether they agree or disagree with him on the issues they care about, they score him similarly to the Republican presidential candidates.

Specifically, 47% of Americans say they agree with Obama on the issues and 50% say they disagree. That -3 net difference is not statistically different from the scores of 0 for Santorum (42% agree, 42% disagree) and -5 for Romney (42% agree, 47% disagree).

Please tell me whether you agree or disagree with -- [RANDOM ORDER] -- on the issues that matter most to you. February 2012

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Obama's greater familiarity to Americans is underscored by the fact that he gets the highest percentage who say they agree with him (47%) and the highest percentage who disagree with him (50%) among the three main presidential contenders.

For all candidates, the patterns in response by party are similar. Those who support the candidate's party overwhelmingly say they agree with him on the issues, and those who do not support his party disagree. Independents tend to express greater disagreement than agreement with all three candidates, with a slightly larger gap for Obama, likely resulting from greater familiarity with him.

Though Republicans' perceptions of Romney's and Santorum's ideology differ, they are equally likely to say they agree with each -- 73% for Romney and 72% for Santorum.

Agree/Disagree With Candidate on Issues, by Political Party, February 2012

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Implications

Americans' views of Obama's ideology have changed significantly since the 2008 campaign, with the majority now seeing him as too liberal. That shift probably is a result of Americans' greater familiarity with his issue positions as well as his policies over the last several years.

Currently, Americans are less likely to perceive either of Obama's likely Republican general election opponents as too conservative; however, that could change as they campaign and become more familiar to the public. That could especially be the case with Santorum, who is the least well-known of the candidates and has taken conservative positions on moral values issues, among others.

It may be seen as an advantage for the GOP that Americans perceive the main Republican candidates as being less extreme to the right than Obama is to the left. But that may not matter as long as Americans continue to be about as likely to say they agree with Obama as the Republicans on the issues they care about.

Indeed, the 2012 general election contest remains highly competitive, with Obama in statistical ties with both Romney and Santorum among registered voters.
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Chris
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Fire & Ice Senior Diplomat
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To me the interesting data here are the Independents' views. If we view them as moderate, their view of Obama is by half he's too liberal, and over hald disagree with his policies. But that isn't the view of those here who insist they're moderate.
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