Back On Track
by digby
Here’s some good news:
Polls suggest that President Obama’s address to Congress on health care reform had a positive effect on shifting public opinion.
A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. snap poll of people interviewed before and after the speech indicated that the president shifted public opinion in his favor. After the speech, two-thirds said they supported Obama’s health care proposals, compared with 53 percent in a survey days before the president spoke. About one in seven speech-watchers changed their minds on Obama’s proposal, but the audience was more Democratic than the U.S. population as a whole, so the results do not reflect the views of all Americans.
Dial-testing by Democracy Corps, a Democratic polling and strategy firm, found that Obama’s speech moved Americans on both sides of the aisle to support reform.
Democracy Corps conducted dial testing of the speech with 50 independent and weak partisan voters in Denver, Colorado, followed by focus groups with voters whose support for Obama’s health care plan increased after seeing the speech. The dial group participants were evenly divided among those who initially supported and initially opposed the plan, with an almost equal division between Obama and McCain voters.
These swing voters reacted strongly to Obama’s message. Support for Obama’s plan jumped 20 points, from 46 percent before the speech to 66 percent after. Importantly, Obama also achieved one of his principal goals of boosting the intensity of support. Prior to the speech, just 2 percent of these swing voters supported the plan strongly while 26 percent opposed it strongly; by the end of the evening those numbers were virtually reversed, with 28 percent supporting the plan strongly against just 8 percent strongly opposed. The president was also extremely successful in moving the needle on areas where progressives have struggled over the last few months, making great strides in reassuring voters on issues like the deficits and taxes, seniors and Medicare, choice and control, competition and costs, and government intervention.
This should help a little bit to persuade the fatuous gasbags that the momentum has shifted back in favor of reform. The fact is that these people always seem to like big speeches even if the gasbags find them boring, but it’s helpful right now to at least remind recalcitrant Democrats that Obama still has the power to persuade. The question, as always, is which Democrats he wanted to remind of that.
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