Obama's Rising Polls Not Sure Sign of Comeback

Thursday, 06 January 2011 11:22 AM EST ET

President Barack Obama should not take a recent uptick in his Gallup polling approval numbers as encouragement for a second term, The New York Times' FiveThirtyEight electoral blog reports. A president's approval ratings right after a midterm election are a historically poor predictor of his re-election chances.

"Ronald Reagan was tied with Gerald Ford for having the lowest [Gallup approval rating] — 37 percent — and he won in a blowout," FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver writes. "Bill Clinton’s approval rating was 47 percent, and he won. George H.W. Bush’s was 58 percent, but he lost. His son George W. had a 63 percent approval rating and won, but only barely."

The correlation between Gallup ratings and re-election odds increases, however, by the end of a president's third year in office.

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President Barack Obama should not take a recent uptick in his Gallup polling approval numbers as encouragement for a second term, The New York Times' FiveThirtyEight electoral blog reports. A president's approval ratings right after a midterm election are a historically...
Midterm elections,Gallup poll,approval numbers,President Barack Obama,re-election chances,predictivepower,past presidents,correlation,The New York Times,FiveThirtyEight,Nate Silver
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2011-22-06
Thursday, 06 January 2011 11:22 AM
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