What They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key Polls – Rasmussen Reports™

Perhaps that guy who called us stupid about health care was on to something. Either that or we simply don’t know what’s best for our own good. After all, Americans don’t much like what they get from Congress and the Administration and yet we keep sending the same boobs back to Washington to “represent” us  LOL

The United States Constitution requires members of the House of Representatives to be at least 25 years of age.

As of January 2013, nine members were in their 80s, 32 members in their 70s, 137 in their 60s. Don’t get me wrong, being in your 70s doesn’t make you incompetent (being a politician does that). But give me a break, this is a power trip and nothing else. Take Diane Feinstein for example she is 81 and has been a Senator for twenty-two years. Harry Reid is 75 and has been in Congress since 1983. Orrin Hatch is 80 and has been in the Senate since 1977. Do you think any of these folks are subject to influence? Ha!

All this and most Americans don’t t20140704-133931-49171659.jpghink the Country is headed in the right direction. Six years of hope and change and we are still increasing the debt, getting back into a war we got out of, marching in the streets because some people don’t trust our police, illegal immigrants made legal, but no new law, no action to fix Social Security or our tax system, no action on the Keystone pipeline, but all the rhetoric you want on birth control, student loans, making fools of ourselves releasing a torture report reflecting bad practices from a different time, illegal aliens, and Wal-Mart’s pay scale. 😛

George, Tom and Ben must be having a good laugh at what the Congress has become.

Hey, if we can’t have term limits, how about age limits? Move over and let someone else drive the ship. You can’t fly in a plane with a pilot over age 65, our generals must retire at 64 and yet there is no age limit if you want to move the Country in any direction you please, and the people be damned.

Yup, Americans are stupid.

Saturday, December 13, 2014

It’s disconnect time between Americans and their government once again.

Voters continue to believe that cutting government spending and taxes are the best presents the federal government can give the economy this holiday season.  Instead, Congress is on the brink of passing a $1.1 trillion budget that does neither.

Most voters have said in surveys for years that controlling the border to stop illegal immigration should come before any steps putting those already here illegally on the path to citizenship. Instead, President Obama on his own has exempted up to five million illegal immigrants from deportation, and so far there doesn’t appear to be much Congress can do about it.

The majority opposes the president taking action on immigration issues without Congress, perhaps in part because many don’t believe he is as interested as they are in stopping illegal immigration.  Voters are closely divided over whether their state should join the 17 states now suing the Obama administration over the president’s action.

Voters weren’t clamoring for a report on CIA interrogation methods either, but the Senate Intelligence Committee released one anyway this week. Some in the national security community warned against making the results of the Senate investigation public, saying it’s likely to cause reprisal attacks against Americans overseas. Voters strongly believe it would have been better for Congress to keep the Central Intelligence Agency’s interrogation methods a secret if the disclosures put the American public at risk.

Besides, nearly half of voters favor the harsh interrogation tactics used by the CIA on suspected terrorists and think they elicited valuable information that helped the United States.

Then there’s Obamacare which remains untouched despite numerous voter concerns. Most voters continue to believe the unpopular national health care law will cost the government more than projected and will push up health care costs for all Americans.

Voters aren’t keen on the idea of declaring war on the radical Islamic group ISIS in Iraq and Syria and strongly feel that congressional approval should be required before the president sends U.S. troops into combat. The Senate edged closer this week to authorizing boots on the ground for a war most voters don’t want.

On the holiday front, Americans remain strongly supportive of celebrating Christmas in the public schools and putting religious displays on public land – even as state and local governments run in the opposite direction.

Voters continue to give mediocre reviews to the public schools and remain strongly pro-choice when it comes to things like uniforms, academic calendars and school prayer.

Despite complaints from many in government, Americans are solidly convinced that their local police are their protectors and give them high makes for the job they do. Most also believe deaths that involve policemen are usually the fault of the suspect, not the cop.

But Americans are less sure of the need for police to use factors such as race, ethnicity and overall appearance to determine whom they should randomly search.

As with many issues involving race, black Americans and white Americans have distinctly different views of the police and recent high-profile events involving them in Ferguson, Missouri and on Staten Island in New York.

Most Americans aren’t convinced that recent protests around the country in response to the grand jury decisions in Missouri and New York will bring about desired changes and think such protests are controlled by special interest groups and outside agitators anyway.

Americans are more supportive of police officers wearing body cameras and believe it will reduce the number of fatal incidents cops are involved in.  Interestingly, however, they think the cameras will protect the police more than civilians.

Voters have become slightly less critical of the president since Election Day, although his daily job approval rating still runs in the negative mid-teens.

Democrats have edged ahead on the latest Generic Congressional Ballot, the first time they’ve had the lead since early October.

In other surveys last week:

— Twenty-six percent (26%) of voters think the United States is heading in the right direction. This finding has been under 30% nearly every week for the past year-and-a-half.

via What They Told Us: Reviewing Last Week’s Key Polls – Rasmussen Reports™.

3 comments

  1. People seem to have a lot to say about almost any topic when they are polled,gooeyman@aol.com especially if it’s to complain about government. I don’t know if you can call them stupid. I think complacent or lazy is a better term. In the last election only 36% of voters bothered to cast a vote. This isn’t a new phenomenon. Over the last 40 years, off year elections average below a 40% turnout. Presidential elections average around 57% for the same time period, a bit better but nothing to cheer about.
    I’d like to see the results of polls that disregard answers from people who don’t bother to vote.
    I do agree that term limits are necessary. They aren’t the perfect solution for our representative democracy but they are better than having career politicians who forget those who they are there to represent.
    It is perfectly consistent for people to feel that congress as a whole does a poor job but their senator or congressman is worthy of re-election. Our system is set up that way to favor incumbents. It is the incumbent who has been re-elected many times who builds up seniority and heads important committees. They are the ones who bring the pork back home to their States or districts. Another reason for term limits.

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  2. When voters consistently rate approval of Congress at less than 20% but say their representative is great it shows that voters really are stupid. Those 2 things CAN’T happen together. Everyone’s representative can’t be great but the entire group be less than 20% favorable. Those 2 things don’t go together unless voters actually are … stupid.

    Forget about age limits. Term limits are the way to go. With age limits someone can be elected at 25 and still be there 40 years later at 65. On second thought, maybe we need both age limits and term limits.

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