[Peace-discuss] Poll and pointlessness

C. G. Estabrook galliher at uiuc.edu
Mon Aug 4 04:53:03 CDT 2008


	OBAMA LEADS, PESSIMISM REIGNS AMONG LOW-WAGE WORKERS
	By Michael D. Shear and Jon Cohen
	Washington Post Staff Writers
	Monday, August 4, 2008; A01

Democratic Sen. Barack Obama holds a 2 to 1 edge over Republican Sen. John 
McCain among the nation's low-wage workers, but many are unconvinced that either 
presidential candidate would be better than the other at fixing the ailing 
economy or improving the health-care system, according to a new national poll.

Obama's advantage is attributable largely to overwhelming support from two 
traditional Democratic constituencies: African Americans and Hispanics. But even 
among white workers -- a group of voters that has been targeted by both parties 
as a key to victory in November -- Obama leads McCain by 10 percentage points, 
47 percent to 37 percent, and has the advantage as the more empathetic candidate.

Still, one in six of the white workers polled remains uncommitted to either 
candidate. And a majority of those polled, both white and minority, are 
ambivalent about the impact of the election, saying that no matter who wins, 
their personal finances are unlikely to change.

"It's not my main concern in life," said Mary Lee, 50, a factory worker in rural 
Kentucky. "I know how politics is. I really don't think it's going to matter 
either way."

More than disaffection drives these workers, according to the new national poll 
by the Washington Post, the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard 
University.

Their politics are shaped partly by their lot in the current economy: These 
voters are among the most severely hurt by rising prices, and many are insecure 
about their finances and lack jobs with basic benefits. Nevertheless, many are 
optimistic about the future even as they express deep suspicion about government.

The new poll included interviews with 1,350 randomly selected workers 18 to 64 
years old who put in at least 30 hours a week but earned $27,000 or less last 
year. As a group, they are somewhat less likely to be Republicans than all 
adults under age 65 and are also less likely to be registered to vote. As many 
call themselves conservatives as liberal, and nearly four in 10 said their views 
on most political matters are "moderate."

The group, which accounts for nearly a quarter of U.S. adults, gives the 
Democrat the nod both as the more empathetic candidate and as the one who more 
closely shares their values. And while many express no opinion about who would 
do more to improve the economy or health care -- or the voters' finances -- 
Obama has the clear edge among those who picked a favorite on these core issues.

Obama's standing with the white workers runs counter to an impression, dating 
from the primary season, that he struggles to attract support from that group. 
McCain advisers have said for months that they think the Republican can win a 
significant share of those voters because of Obama's performance in the spring.

The survey suggests it will be difficult, but not impossible, for McCain to 
increase his appeal. Whereas Obama underperforms congressional Democrats by six 
points among low-wage whites -- 53 percent would prefer that the party control 
Congress -- McCain has a seven-point edge over congressional Republicans.

Sixteen percent of the white workers polled chose neither Obama nor McCain, 
saying either that they have no opinion or that they support someone else or 
that they do not plan to vote.

Ruth Haskins, 64, the city clerk of Billings, Mo., said she is "scared about the 
younger generation running the country" and is solidly "on the fence" about the 
election.

In May, as the race between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton raged on, 
McCain adviser Charlie Black told reporters that the campaign would reach out to 
working-class white voters, in part because of Obama's difficulties wresting 
such voters from the Clinton camp.

"Senator Obama doesn't appear to have the ability to hold the traditional 
Democratic coalition together as well as Mrs. Clinton might," he said at the time.

In an interview last week, Black said the campaign still plans to target 
working-class white voters, particularly by appealing to them on economic and 
energy issues. Jobs and gasoline prices are "very big to people in that income 
range," Black said.

Nearly two-thirds of the white workers surveyed want the government to make 
lower gas prices a "top priority," something McCain pitched earlier this year in 
advocating for a suspension of the federal gas tax. One respondent was 
particularly clear on this point: "I'll vote for whoever can bring the price of 
gas down," said Brian Levesque, 25, a social worker from Lansdale, Pa.

But slightly more, seven in 10, say government should focus on helping people 
like them find more affordable health insurance, a core component of Obama's 
campaign. Just over four in 10 favor placing a top priority on tax cuts or on 
creating jobs through an expansion of public works projects.

Overall, the survey suggests that Obama's economic appeals have the most 
resonance with white workers who are under the greatest financial stress. He 
leads by 19 percentage points among those white workers who feel "very insecure" 
financially; that is more than double his advantage among those in the group who 
feel better off.

McCain leads among those who say they have advanced over the past seven years, 
but it is a much smaller group -- only 17 percent of low-wage white workers. 
Obama has the edge among those who say they have stayed about even over that 
time period.

An issue of acute importance to low-wage workers -- the impact of illegal 
immigration -- is one that divides workers in the poll about evenly: Forty-nine 
percent said illegal immigrants take jobs from legal residents, and 47 percent 
said they do not.

Nearly six in 10 white and black workers said they think undocumented workers 
take jobs away from those here legally; seven in 10 Hispanics disagreed. (Nearly 
half of the Hispanic workers interviewed in this poll are not U.S. citizens.)

International trade -- and its impact on increasingly scarce jobs -- is another 
issue that may prove a flash point for workers in the fall campaign.

Half of those polled said growth in trade has made things worse for the country; 
far fewer, only about two in 10, said it has had a net benefit, and a similar 
percentage said they are unsure. But a majority also said trade has not changed 
their lives one way or the other.

As is the case with immigration, majorities of white and black workers said 
trade has done more harm than good, while most Hispanics disagreed.

"One thing I keep seeing is a lack of wherewithal to tackle the tough issues 
like health care, illegal immigration," said Stephanie Dayton, 51, a bookkeeper 
in Tucson. "It's sort of like overhauling the tax code. If there was an easy way 
to tackle it without conflict, they would have done it already. At some point it 
takes some backbone to get it done. Get some backbone and decide what you stand 
for."

McCain's biggest challenge is among minority workers.

Among the African Americans polled, 92 percent chose Obama as the candidate more 
concerned with their problems; not a single black respondent said so about 
McCain, although 1 percent said "both do." Hispanics also sided with Obama on 
that question, favoring him by more than 40 percentage points as the more 
empathetic candidate.

The poll was conducted by conventional and cellular telephone June 18 to July 7, 
among a random national sample of low-wage workers. Interviews were conducted in 
English and Spanish. The results have a margin of sampling error of plus or 
minus four percentage points.


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