![]() |
Sunday, March 04, 2012
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows that 27% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty-two percent (42%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -15 (see trends). I'm one of the uncommitted voters who put Obama in the White House. I would be a more natural GOP voter if they didn't fight culture wars and support corporations over individuals. Obama is still beatable if Mitt can change his message back to moderate governorship. If that happens and he loses the GOP will continue the culture war and be completely irrelevant unless someone can explain the reality of the situation to them. Maybe a huge Santorum loss would be best but having him that close with a partisan Supreme Court makes me damn nervous. |
I got a whiff of dodgy stats when I noticed the figure they present ( -15) is based on comparing the strongly approve and the strongly disapprove. What about the moderates?
And then why base the data on that particular day? was it, perhaps, a bit of a statistical outlier? Follow the links to the original source. http://www.rasmussenreports.com/publ..._index_history Ignore the "Presidential approval index" which focuses on the extremists who aren't going to swing. Look at the two columns on the far right, total approve and total disapprove. Scroll back to look over the last couple of months. Make your own interpretation. My interpretation is hidden below: So far this year: The difference has never been more than 45/55, and has often been within four points. Disapprove has been higher most of the time, but not always. over the year, this shows a moderate preponderance of disapproval. ETA it's worth scrolling at high speed through his entire term. Of course, the problem for the republican candidates is that people disapprove of them even more. |
The R's are in disarray and apparently have no cohesive anything right now.
Quote:
I'll bet there are tons of Obama commercials already prepared and ready to run simply based upon his gaffes and statements from the last couple months. |
Why for you now convert others' posts to pomes?
|
FWIW: In 2009, GM employed 12,600 in Ohio, Ford had about 7,000. Honda had 15,000
General Motors has signed a new contract to bring 760 new jobs to Ohio, increase parts and welding assembly work in Ohio that currently is being done overseas, and call back of most workers that had been laid off due to parts shortages. Here are some of the items in the new contract: What UAW members get under tentative contract with GM Quote:
|
Quote:
|
GM will also pay bonuses of at least $182 million to white-collar workers
most of whom make more than $100,000 a year. They'll range from 8-14%. That's in addition to the over 300 million in profit sharing they already had planned for factory workers. Additionally there are some who are raising new questions about GM's new tax structure which was altered as part of the bailout. No word yet on what their new effective rate is now. |
Quote:
and the employment multiplier effect added about 14,800 other jobs in the local communities. That's nearly 30,000 jobs and almost as many families directly related to GM (only). The recent GM -UAW contract sounds as if those 12,600 employees are/will be back to work, along with 760 new jobs that are being brought back from overseas. I'm not seeing a whole lot wrong with all that. What point(s) are you making... just adding new information, or - that white collar employees are/were making too much ? - that GM can/should not to pay bonuses to white collar workers ? - that the bailout of the automotive industry was wrong ? - that GM should have gone bankrupt and all those jobs be lost ? - that there is some sort of tax skullduggery going on ? . |
Quote:
Quote:
To your last point regarding the taxes, I just recently learned that their tax structure was altered in the bailout. What effect it had, I do not know. |
NSA whistle-blower: Obama “worse than Bush”
Quote:
Link |
Interesting article.
|
Hiya Merc, you've been quiet lately ... working long shifts again?
|
Quote:
|
|
In the foreclosure agreement between the 5 big banks and the Federal and State governments,
there remained open the option for the governments to pursue additional penalties. The first of these actions is being made public today... Wall Street Journal RUTH SIMON 3/12/12 Foreclosure Pact Alleges a Pattern of Malfeasance Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:02 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.