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Thursday, January 28, 2010

America "Aint" Buying It: Only 9% Percent of Voters Think Obama's Spending Freeze Will Help

A key initiative in Obama’s SOTU speech was a three-year freeze on discretionary government spending.  But voters aren't buying it , according to Rasmussen they overwhelmingly believe the freeze will have little or no impact on the federal deficit.

In fact only nine percent think the freeze will reduce the deficit a lot. Eighty-one percent disagree, including 42% who say it will have absolutely no impact. Another 39% say the freeze will reduce the deficit a little.

Those voters "got it right" The proposed ‘spending freeze’ will only reduce the $42 trillion in government spending proposed between 2011 and 2020 by little more than one-half of one percent:




Still, 56% favor the president’s plan for a three-year freeze on discretionary spending. Only 24% oppose it, and 20% more are undecided. Other data suggests that voters view the proposal as a first step in the right direction.
Overall, 57% would like to see a cut in government spending, 23% favor a freeze, and 12% say the government should increase spending. Republicans and unaffiliated voters overwhelmingly favor spending cuts. Democrats are evenly divided between spending cuts and a spending freeze.
It’s important to note that 49% of voters think reducing federal spending is more important than bringing down the deficit. Thirty-nine percent (39%) say reducing the deficit is more important.
The data found a significant partisan divide on this point. Most Republicans (58%) and unaffiliateds (53%) believe cutting federal spending is more important that cutting the deficit. A plurality (48%) of Democrats take the opposite view and believe reducing the deficit is more important. [of course they go hand in hand]
During his State of the Union address Wednesday night, the president touched on a number of topics that Rasmussen Reports has current polling data on measuring the attitudes of the American people.

Fifty-nine percent (59%) of voters believe cutting taxes is better than increasing government spending as a job-creation tool, but 72% expect Congress to increase spending instead. Eighty-two percent (82%) of voters nationwide say they have followed news stories about the president’s State of the Union address, including 40% who have been following very closely.

Democrats from the start have viewed health care reform as the most important of the budget priorities cited by the president in a speech to Congress last February. Republicans and unaffiliated voters consistently have said the president’s priority should be cutting the federal budget deficit in half by the end of his first term.

The Congressional Budget Office this week projected that the federal government’s 2010 budget deficit will be $1.35 trillion, a higher portion of the economy than at any time since World War II.
Sixty-one percent (61%) of all voters now say Congress should drop health care reform and focus on more immediate ways to improve the economy and create jobs.
 But one thing was obvious in Yesterdays Speech, the POTUS doesn't really care what we think. (For an analysis of the speech CLICK HERE).

1 comment:

GeronL said...

""Those voters "got it right" The proposed ‘spending freeze’ will only reduce the $42 trillion in government spending proposed between 2011 and 2020 by little more than one-half of one percent""


and that is IF they actually do it, which is not likely.