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Concern about the strength of the US economy, coupled with worries about Ebola and Islamic State militants, are driving the dour mood of a restive electorate. Democrats could pay the price when voters elect 36 senators, all 435 members of the House of Representatives and 36 state governors.
Obama’s name is not on the ballot, but his low job approval rating reflects a lack of confidence in his leadership during the sixth year of his presidency. Polls indicate Democrats have less enthusiasm for voting than Republicans, and history shows the party that is in power in the White House in midterm elections usually loses seats.
“There doesn’t seem to be a lot of things for people to feel good about,” said David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at the Southern Illinois University.
“It may not be fair, but they tend to take those kinds of feelings out on the White House, and as a practical matter I think the Senate goes Republican.”
In the House of Representatives, Republicans are expected to build on their majority of 233 seats to 199 for Democrats. They also will likely retain their majority in the number of governors’ seats they hold in state capitals.
But the heavy campaign action has been in the 100-member Senate, where Republicans need to pick up six seats to reclaim the majority from Democrats and control both chambers of Congress for the first time since the 2006 election. While Republicans are expected to gain seats, as many as eight to 10 Senate races are still considered toss-ups that could go either way.
In boost to Cameron, popularity of UK opposition leader Miliband hits a low
Reuters: British opposition Labour party leader Ed Miliband’s approval rating has hit a record low, a poll showed on Sunday, raising further doubts about his ability to unseat Prime Minister David Cameron in a national election in just over six months.
The survey was published after polling data last week showed Miliband’s left-leaning party was set to be nearly wiped out in Scotland, a traditional stronghold, and after a string of polls suggested a long UK-wide lead it had enjoyed over Cameron’s Conservatives has shrunk.
Derided by the press as socially awkward since he assumed the party’s leadership in 2010, Miliband, an Oxford-educated career politician with the demeanour of an academic, is seen by some in and around his party as an electoral liability rather than an asset.
Sunday’s poll, by YouGov for The Sunday Times newspaper, showed that 73% of voters thought Miliband, 44, was doing badly, with only 18% saying he was doing a good job. That gave him an overall approval rating of -55.
Last month, Miliband’s rating hit a 33-month low in a comparable YouGov poll, with 71% saying he was doing badly and 20% well. His latest approval rating means he has overtaken Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister and leader of the Liberal Democrats, as the least popular of the three main party leaders.
Labour’s overall support was 32%, the same poll said, just one point ahead of the Conservatives, its lowest level of support since 2010.
Cameron, the 48-year-old leader of the Conservative party, remains the most popular of the party leaders, the poll showed, with 54% saying he was doing his job badly and 40% well. That gave him an approval rating of -14.
Yvette Cooper, Labour’s spokeswoman for home affairs, said on Sunday she thought Miliband was doing a good job, but John Prescott, Labour’s former deputy prime minister, suggested there were problems with strategy. |