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Poll: 71% of Obama voters, 55% Democrats 'regret' voting for his re-election


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2014 Feb 18, 1:07am   37,501 views  144 comments

by zzyzzx   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

http://washingtonexaminer.com/poll-71-of-obama-supporters-regret-voting-for-his-reelection/article/2544165

Over seven in 10 Obama voters, and 55 percent of Democrats, regret voting for President Obama's reelection in 2012, according to a new Economist/YouGov.com poll.

The poll asked those who voted for Obama's reelection a simple question: “Do you regret voting for Barack Obama?”

Overall, 71 percent said yes, 26 percent no.

80 percent of whites said yes, 61 percent of blacks said no and 100 percent of Hispanics said yes.

84 percent of women said yes, and just 61 percent of men agreed.

55 percent of Democrats said yes, as did 71 percent of independents.

#politics

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2   zzyzzx   2014 Feb 18, 1:21am  

bgamall4 says

What have Republicans done for the old

Taxpayer subsidized drugs, reduced tax rates on dividend income.

3   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 1:23am  

bgamall4 says

I can understand that, but Romney was a dickhead, so what do you do? Probably not vote.

That would have been preferable, at least gave the Independent candidates or other non party anointed players from the republican field a more honest assessment. There were options, it's just that the Liberal news and Pollsters has Democracy in this perverse state, that if you don't vote for one of the two parties, then you're throwing your vote away, and it don't count. So as a result people are afraid to look any further than tonight's Liberal or Conservative news official poll results. While people who don't identify with either party is now more than 1/3 of the population.

Vote with our conscious next time and quit getting ear fucked by some self serving Liberal telling you what side of History you're on, or what History even will be before it ever happens.

4   lostand confused   2014 Feb 18, 1:25am  

I wished they would let us put animals in the ballot. My vote would have been for a pig or a donkey or maybe a chameleon?

5   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 1:26am  

Had YOU Voted for Nader there would have not been 911.

Or Obama!

6   edvard2   2014 Feb 18, 1:31am  

So what. The approval rating of the GOP is the lowest its ever been. They have no clear strategy to deal with the realities of the current demographic and the growing majority of immigrants and Latinos who won't for them. They can't even get along with themselves as seen with a defined split between the Tea Party faction that tried shut down the government and the rest of the party that wants to wash their hands of them. So basically feel good all you want about this report. But there's far more trouble within the GOP by far.

7   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 1:40am  

bgamall4 says

Why? What have Republicans done for...Latinos lately?

Illegal or Legal?

Believe it or not Raul Sanchez that came here in the 70's or 80's and had to work his ass off to get every thing that he has. Had to make sacrifices to raise money to pay lawyers to go through the tough Immigration system. But did so, and did so with Great Pride. He feels like more of an American than any California White Liberal could possibly understand. Regardless of his accent, diet and skin shade, he feels every bit of an American. And doesn't think it's fair, that Liberals want to bring in illegal... excuse me, Guest Visas to take his job him that took him years to get. He knows he'll be replaced the minute the first bus air-brakes hiss upon arrival at the bus terminal.

They aren't stupid, anything short of just out right giving amnesty to the illegals already here with out other provisions that requires that they go home first and hope for the best. While bus loads of fresh meat gets shipped in to replace them, and erase all the advancement that they made in the US as respectable Latin citizens. Will be erased by the new Min wage workers doing those jobs that American's don't want to do for so little money.

Right now neither side wants to do that, not with out big elaborate caveats.

Like bigger fences, and gun torrents on the boarder first - per the GOP

or

Send the ones already here home, and import some fresh cheap meat. - per the Dems

See neither option is sexy. But unless you're an illegal who can't vote, it's not a problem for either one.

So the American Latin voters who are Citizens on the other hand, have ended their experiment with American Liberalism, they have always been Conservatives, and will continue to be so.

8   lostand confused   2014 Feb 18, 2:19am  

bgamall4 says

I am no Obama brown nose and hold him personally responsible for the Sandy Hook
Hoax

LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

9   Shaman   2014 Feb 18, 2:20am  

Your vote only matters in the primaries. That's when candidates are allowed who haven't yet sold their souls to the wealthy elite. Vote for one of them next time, instead of whoever the lame stream media is touting as the "front runners."
Once these front runners are on the big ticket, you may as well vote for Mickey Mouse since neither ticket will represent you.

10   Automan Empire   2014 Feb 18, 2:26am  

Regret Obama? Hell no! Why? Romney!

11   edvard2   2014 Feb 18, 2:54am  

bgamall4 says

Ahhhh.... The resident Obama brown nose shows up right on cue with his GOP rant of the day....

I have "Call it crazy" on ignore, but seeing as how he showed up in a quote and made yet another silly comment I feel compelled to respond anyway.

At least I'm not a brown noser for the GOP and anything that would fit under the definition of ignorant and backwards.

12   zzyzzx   2014 Feb 18, 2:57am  

bgamall4 says

But compared to the Republicans, we have more peace with Democrats as a general rule.

Wilson, a Democrat was president during WW1
Roosevelt, a Democrat was president during WW2
Truman, a Democrat was president during the Korean war
Johnson/Kennedy, both Democrats got us involved in the Vietnam War.

Anything done by Bush 1 & 2 since them pales in comparison.

13   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 3:02am  

bgamall4 says

Look at how little war we have now compared to when Republicans are in charge.

At least before we were a nation at war under the sanctions of the UN, with Congress approval and the People's support.
What do you call a rouge assassin, with remote fire power to take out a whole village with the press of a button.

14   anonymous   2014 Feb 18, 3:04am  

Housing prices will dominate as the important issue off the upcoming elections. Seeing as how all the demtards chant in unison to make the entire country poorer via higher housing costs, I could see people voting for the shitstain gop.

15   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2014 Feb 18, 3:13am  

zzyzzx says

bgamall4 says

But compared to the Republicans, we have more peace with Democrats as a general rule.

Wilson, a Democrat was president during WW1

Roosevelt, a Democrat was president during WW2

Truman, a Democrat was president during the Korean war

Johnson/Kennedy, both Democrats got us involved in the Vietnam War.

Anything done by Bush 1 & 2 since them pales in comparison.

On the home front, we had Ruby Ridge, David Koresh, and the OKC bombing all under a Dem president, as well as the recent Sandy hook, Dc shootings, and that nutjob at the movie theatre in Colorado.

16   dublin hillz   2014 Feb 18, 3:23am  

errc says

Housing prices will dominate as the important issue off the upcoming elections. Seeing as how all the demtards chant in unison to make the entire country poorer via higher housing costs, I could see people voting for the shitstain gop.

How have the reps tried to make housing costs more affordable? I don't recall that ever happening. Seems to me that both parties want high housing prices for the simple reason that almost 2/3rds of americans own and the "think tank" has concluded that existing owners get stimulated by wealth effect and spend money when their home values are up.

17   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 3:34am  

Quigley says

Your vote only matters in the primaries. That's when candidates are allowed who haven't yet sold their souls to the wealthy elite. Vote for one of them next time, instead of whoever the lame stream media is touting as the "front runners."

Once these front runners are on the big ticket, you may as well vote for Mickey Mouse since neither ticket will represent you.

That is the break in Democracy right there.
The biggest problem facing our Voting system right now, is not voting fraud. It's no representation for more than 1/3 of the registered voting public.

The person you described usually appeals to the opposite parties dissillusioned base, or those who are registered as NPA, neither of which are allowed to vote in primaries for parties they are not registed for.

So the same tired ass lame groomed and properly vetted dickhead, gets the official party nod, that then all of the party-line toters all fall in line to tow to November.

Who ever sucks down the most inches on a Corn dog at the Iowa state fair is far more important than who is being denied to participate in voting in the primaries, or who else in those parties are being stonewalled, railroaded and Wide walled and reduced to off the cuff sound bytes taken out of context.

Nothing is going to change, until America ignores the Left bitching when they vote their conscious for someone who isn't an official sanctioned entry in the National Idiot contest. Or they start allowing open primaries.

Why not, you can still only vote once in the Primaries.

If you wanna waste your vote on rigging the opposition to set them up to lose against the worst possible candidate. Then that would only be something that could bite you in the ass ten fold should he win the November election.

I don't think there's any reason to not open up the primaries, but other than allow both parties tighter control of who actually gets put on the cereal box.

18   zzyzzx   2014 Feb 18, 3:42am  

dublin hillz says

Seems to me that both parties want high housing prices for the simple reason that almost 2/3rds of americans own and the "think tank" has concluded that existing owners get stimulated by wealth effect and spend money when their home values are up.

I always thought it had to do with all the campaign contributions made by real estate agents.

19   zzyzzx   2014 Feb 18, 3:44am  

bgamall4 says

WW1 and WW2 were defensive wars.

WW1 was not a defensive war! We went to war to defend and expand British ans French colonial expansion and to keep Eastern Europe as part of the USSR.

20   Homeboy   2014 Feb 18, 3:45am  

zzyzzx, just when I think you couldn't possible be any more of an idiot, you go and surprise me.

It was not 71% of Obama voters, it was 71% of THOSE WHO SAID THEY WOULDN'T VOTE FOR OBAMA IF THE ELECTION WERE HELD AGAIN.

Here is the question from the actual poll, not a 3rd hand source as you quoted:

4. Regret Obama vote
Do you regret voting for Barack Obama?
Asked of those who reported voting for Barack Obama in 2012 but would vote for someone else if the election were held again

So how many said they wouldn't vote for Obama if the election were held again? Only 10%.

3. Still vote for Obama
If the election was held again, would you still vote for Barack Obama?
Asked of those who voted for Barack Obama in 2012

Yes 79%
No 10%
Not sure 11%

http://cdn.yougov.com/cumulus_uploads/document/ge25jg66q8/tabs_OPI_romney_documentary_20140210.pdf

It didn't strike you as odd that you were claiming 100% of Hispanics regretted voting for Obama? 100%?

The stupid. It burns!

21   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 3:52am  

Still, given the choice of Obama versus Romney, Obama supporters said they would stick with their guy, 79 percent to 10 percent for Romney.

That 20 percent swing would be all the difference in the world.
And is the only thing standing between you and mandated Mormon underwear.

22   hrhjuliet   2014 Feb 18, 3:54am  

I'm not convinced the parties are really that different. I think we are meant to see them as fundamentally different, which is a divisive tactic. It's like a football game; everyone gets all riled up over THEIR team, they get in fights with strangers and even their own friends over it, some people even get hospitalized over the fights over their teams at games they paid triple digits to see. Why? Because the teams are REALLY that different? No, they are just drafted guys who could easily be drafted to the opposing team the following year. The players follow the money. When you rally for your team you get a hit of serotonin, when you rally with others that hit is greater, it's a dopamine hit. It's rally mentality, and the spin doctors use people's love of pointless rallying to get you to instill loyalty. If you really think about how odd it is that the majority of people in this country will pay hundreds to see a football game live, and will fight with their best friend over it, you will understand what strings the people in power are pulling to get the masses to react the way they need. The two political parties are not fundamentally any more different from each other than two football teams are. Essentially, we are putting tons of energy and money into something as trivial as a football game. It doesn't really matter who wins or loses. It's like how liberals are meant to believe that there is a conservative media, and conservatives are meant to believe there is a liberal media. No, there is corporate media convincing the liberals that NBC is fair, while they convince conservatives that FOX is fair. They are both filtered propaganda controlled by a limited few with the intention of distracting the American people from the truth by dividing them and instilling fear, while making them falsely believe that their "team" media is on their side. We are all coming to the political bowl and defending and cheering on our team, but in reality the two parties are outside the stadium doing their dirty work together, hand in hand, while our eyes are still fixed on the meaningless game inside.

23   dublin hillz   2014 Feb 18, 4:00am  

hrhjuliet says

Why? Because the teams are REALLY that different? No, they are just drafted guys
who could easily be drafted to the opposing team the following year.

I think there are differences at lower levels of government, but once they get to the top echelons of power, many of them on both sides are 1 percenters so chances are out of "rational self interest" they will vote for policies or enforce/look other way regarding legislation that is of benefit to the interest of the 1%.

24   Homeboy   2014 Feb 18, 4:01am  

CaptainShuddup says

Still, given the choice of Obama versus Romney, Obama supporters said they would stick with their guy, 79 percent to 10 percent for Romney.

That's just stupid. Romney never became president. The "support" of his voters is based only on his campaign promises, since he never had the opportunity to break them. Believe me, if Romney had won, struck down ACA, gave tax breaks to the rich, and then said, "Oh, you can't get health insurance? Well here's a useless 'voucher'." he would be about as popular as a root canal.

25   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 4:04am  

Yes selecting the president process has diluted to the point that by time November rolls around. The issues are all reduced to two political parties talking points, and all thought into who will be the president is as apathetic as to who will win the next super bowl.

Most people never cared for either team playing but they'll spend hundreds on food and beer, or thousands on televisions and toys, to mark the occasion as they root for a team that they have absolutely no vested emotional interest in, other than to see the commercials, and hear Jimmy Kimal quip

26   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 4:05am  

Homeboy says

CaptainShuddup says

Still, given the choice of Obama versus Romney, Obama supporters said they would stick with their guy, 79 percent to 10 percent for Romney.

That was a quote from the article.

27   rooemoore   2014 Feb 18, 4:07am  

Homeboy says

That's just stupid. Romney never became president.

Exactly.

28   HEY YOU   2014 Feb 18, 4:08am  

90% would vote for Romney again? So they continue to pick losers?

29   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 4:08am  

Homeboy says

That's just stupid. Romney never became president. The "support" of his voters is based only on his campaign promises, since he never had the opportunity to break them. Believe me, if Romney had won, struck down ACA, gave tax breaks to the rich, and then said, "Oh, you can't get health insurance? Well here's a useless 'voucher'." he would be about as popular as a root canal.

I don't think Healthcare would have been a big concern had he also kept his other promise to create jobs with adult sized wages.

Of course this is all just speculation, you know, not any different than when you guys said that Obama would be better.
But at least Romney hasn't proved it yet.

30   Homeboy   2014 Feb 18, 4:12am  

CaptainShuddup says

I don't think Healthcare would have been a big concern had he also kept his other promise to create jobs with adult sized wages.

By throwing money at the top 1%? Yeah, that works...

Most people who voted for Obama, myself included, are of the opinion that he's a bit of a disappointment. But almost EVERYONE who voted for Obama are quite sure Romney would have been worse.

31   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 4:17am  

Homeboy says

opinion

And you quite free to shit out of your opinion.

32   Homeboy   2014 Feb 18, 4:20am  

I don't think there's a lot of difference between the two parties now. The only reason democrats are winning is because we don't want EVEN MORE of our money thrown at the banksters, and we don't want a federal law banning abortion and gay marriage.

Oh, and we don't want our schoolkids being fed Fritos and Ding Dongs for lunch, and counting them as vegetables.

33   Homeboy   2014 Feb 18, 4:25am  

CaptainShuddup says

And you quite free to shit out of your opinion.

I'll be sure to note your disagreement with my "opinion" that Obama is a disappointment. LOL.

34   Tenpoundbass   2014 Feb 18, 4:30am  

Homeboy says

Oh, and we don't want our schoolkids being fed Fritos and Ding Dongs for lunch

Can't have eating touching the murch.

Dealers can't be users and if they are going to be part time minimum wage purveyors of Frito and whoppers, then it's probably a good call.

35   Dan8267   2014 Feb 18, 4:33am  

zzyzzx says

55% Democrats 'regret' voting for his re-election

I call bullshit. Many Democrats and independents voted for Obama, not because they liked him, but because he was the lesser of the two evils. There is no way that 55% of Democrats now consider Romney and Ryan to be the lesser of the two evils and wish they had voted for those two numbnuts.

Furthermore, a link in the original article takes you to a article in which the site claims the #1 campaign donor is "unions".

Unions is not an organization; it is a term that applies to tens of thousands of organizations. If we're playing that game, the #1 campaign donor is "corporations" and the #2 is "people". Less than ten seconds on washingtonexaminer.com makes me conclude it's a right-wing propaganda machine.

36   edvard2   2014 Feb 18, 4:40am  

hrhjuliet says

I'm not convinced the parties are really that different.

Their stances that they show to the public are night and day. The GOP has been using Nixon's Southern Strategy for the better part of 45 years and counting. The Democrats used to be that party. The Democrats have been fairly consistent with their message of government playing a more active role via social programs and legislation that benefits the working and middle classes. They have also favored environmental and workplace regulations

The GOP has been consistent on having limited government, minus military spending, having very little social programs and a financial agenda that favors more wealthy Americans at the disadvantage of the working and middle classes. They have also consistently disfavored environmental and workplace regulations.

The GOP at one time was the party of the educated and social elite. They did a 360 as soon as Nixon enacted the Southern Strategy. The Democrats are now ironically more akin to the old GOP.

37   mell   2014 Feb 18, 5:45am  

rooemoore says

Homeboy says

That's just stupid. Romney never became president.

Exactly.

And that's a pity since we would have gotten rid of the mortgage tax deduction and other "special" bullshit deductions if Mittens had become president.

38   control point   2014 Feb 18, 5:51am  

mell says

And that's a pity since we would have gotten rid of the mortgage tax
deduction and other "special" bullshit deductions if Mittens had become
president.

Check out whats happening in NC today and watch what happens in the next five years to see what the country would have been like under a Romney Presidency.

39   mell   2014 Feb 18, 6:17am  

control point says

mell says

And that's a pity since we would have gotten rid of the mortgage tax

deduction and other "special" bullshit deductions if Mittens had become

president.

Check out whats happening in NC today and watch what happens in the next five years to see what the country would have been like under a Romney Presidency.

If you are referring to the duke clusterfuck, it has nothing to do with Romney, so that's irrelevant. I'm somehow confident Mittens could swing in whatever way the public opinion evolves on coal ;)

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/oct/16/barack-obama/obama-says-romney-once-said-coal-burning-plant-kil/

40   dublin hillz   2014 Feb 18, 6:19am  

mell says

rooemoore says



Homeboy says



That's just stupid. Romney never became president.


Exactly.


And that's a pity since we would have gotten rid of the mortgage tax deduction and other "special" bullshit deductions if Mittens had become president.

It remains to be seen how seriously mr bain would have pursued MID removal. Also, if he were to combine it with reducing tax burden on passive income investment ballers, it would have been rightly perceived as a class warfare attack against the middle class.

41   curious2   2014 Feb 18, 6:34am  

Comparing the OP headline from the Moonie Examiner to the headline from those who conducted the poll, and the actual poll results, reminds me of an adage from when I studied stastics: “Some people,” said Andrew Lang, “use statistics as a drunk man uses lamp-posts—for support rather than for illumination.”

From the linked article:

After Secrets first published their poll, YouGov.com noted that the sample for the question was small and recharacterized the sample as "those who reported voting for Barack Obama in 2012 but would vote for someone else if the election were held again" from "those who voted for Barack Obama in 2012."

Still, given the choice of Obama versus Romney, Obama supporters said they would stick with their guy, 79 percent to 10 percent for Romney.

If you want to understand how small the sample was, consider the "100% of Hispanics" factoid was based on four Hispanic voters. Not four thousand, not even four hundred, just plain four! The poll was reportedly commissioned to see if Romney should try again in 2016, and the answer was basically no.

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