ABC/WP poll: it’s a referendum on Iraq, and the center has peeled away

ABC NEWS/WASHINGTON POST POLL: ‘06 ELN UPDATE - 10/22/06

In a Referendum on Iraq The Center Peels Away

Two weeks away, the 2006 midterm elections look more than anything
like a referendum on the war in Iraq – a war on which George W. Bush
and his party have lost not just the political center, but
significant chunks of their own base as well.

An improving economy notwithstanding, opposition to the war remains
the prime issue driving congressional vote preference. And the war’s
critics include not just eight in 10 Democrats, but 64 percent of
independents, 40 percent of conservatives, 35 percent of evangelical
white Protestants and a quarter of Republicans themselves.

It matters: Among the four in 10 registered voters who favor the war
in Iraq, 73 percent support the Republican in their congressional
district. But many more, nearly six in 10, oppose the war – and 78
percent of them favor Democrats for the House.

That spells a continued, dramatic Democratic lead: Fifty-four percent
of registered voters in this ABC News/Washington Post poll prefer the
Democrat in their congressional district, 41 percent the Republican,
among the highest levels of Democratic support since 1984 in ABC/Post
surveys.

Among likely voters the race is a nearly identical 55-41 percent.

Another result underscores the sense of urgency many Americans give
to this election: Fifty-eight percent of registered voters call it
more important to the country than past congressional elections in
their lifetime. Perhaps scenting blood, Democrats, in particular, say
so – 69 percent of them, vs. 49 percent of Republicans.

LEAD – The Democratic lead comes mainly from the center, which simply
is not holding for the Republicans: Independents, the quintessential
swing voters, favor Democrats for the House by 28 percentage points,
59-31 percent. That compares to just a three-point Democratic edge
among independents in the 2004 exit poll; indeed it’s better than
House Democrats have done among independents in exit polls since 1982.

But Democratic House candidates also are poaching on Republican turf,
notably winning support from 29 percent of conservatives, compared
with 17 percent in 2004; and, albeit in less of a shift, by 30
percent of evangelical white Protestants, vs. 24 percent in 2004.

Democratic congressional candidates also now lead by 54-42 percent
among men – a group they haven’t won since 1992. And 10 percent of
Republicans favor the Democrat in their district – a small group, but
greater than the level of Democratic defections to Republican
candidates, just four percent.

CHANGE – A further problem for the Republicans is the war-related
desire for change, and specifically for a change from the current
Republican leadership. Just 37 percent of Americans approve of Bush’s
job performance overall, down five points from September. He’s been
rated lower just once in his career, 33 percent approval in May – and
then, unlike now, rising gasoline prices were partly to blame.

Nearly twice as many registered voters say they’ll cast their ballot
as a way to show opposition to Bush (31 percent) as to support him
(17 percent); that is triple the level of anti-Bill Clinton voting in
the 1998 midterms, during the height of the Lewinsky scandal. Sixty- eight percent of Americans say the country’s off on the wrong track –
the highest in 10 years, save for last May and November – a view
closely related with views on the Iraq war. Sixty-five percent
disapprove of how Congress is doing its job, including 45 percent of
Republicans, whose party controls the institution.

And in a sign the ill will is aimed at the Republican leadership, 47
percent of registered voters say it would be a good thing if control
of Congress switches to the Democrats, twice as many as say it’d be a
bad thing. At this time in 1994, substantially fewer, 36 percent,
said it’d be a good thing if the Republicans took control, as they
did. Indeed 1994 was an anti-incumbent election; at the time just 49
percent approved of their own representative’s job performance. Today
more, 59 percent, approve, making it less of an anti-incumbent
election, and more of a partisan protest.

Indeed the Democrats are benefiting from a substantial negative vote.
Among registered voters who prefer Democrats for House, 55 percent
are mainly voting pro-Democrat, but a substantial 43 percent say
they’re mainly voting, instead, to oppose the Republican candidate.
The Republican vote is much more affirmative: Seventy percent pro-
Republican, 25 percent anti-Democrat.

HORSE RACE – The congressional horse race tells more about voter
sentiment nationally than about the status of individual races at the
state and district level. Incumbency is powerful, late advertising
matters and get-out-the vote drives can be decisive. But another
result indicates that the Democrats – at least so far – are holding
their own in voter contacts.

As many registered voters say they’ve been personally contacted on
behalf of a Democratic candidate as by a Republican organization
(about two in 10 in both cases). And the Democratic calls look better
targeted: People who’ve been solicited on behalf of a Democratic
candidate favor the Democrat in their district by a 45-point margin;
people who’ve gotten a Republican contact prefer the Republican by a
narrower 19 points.

ECONOMY – Bush and his party clearly want to change the subject of
the election from Iraq to something (almost anything) else. Hence the
president’s comments today heralding the economy. It makes sense:
Fifty-five percent of Americans in this poll say the economy is in
good shape – the most since Bush took office.

But economic gains are not evenly spread: While 24 percent say
they’re getting ahead financially, as many, 23 percent, say they’re
falling behind, and most, 52 percent, are simply maintaining their
standard of living, not improving it.

The result is that the economy, even while better-rated, is not
bringing the Republicans much in the way of votes. Registered voters
who are getting ahead financially favor the Republican in their
district by 64-34 percent; those who are falling behind favor the
Democrat by 76-18 percent. But, crucially, the big middle group,
those treading water economically, go Democrat by a 17-point margin,
56-39 percent.

Moreover, those who call the economy the most important issue in
their vote favor the Democrat in their district, by 57-39 percent.

ISSUES – Twenty-seven percent of registered voters call the war in
Iraq the top issue in their vote; 19 percent say it’s the economy, 14
percent terrorism, 13 percent health care 10 percent immigration and
eight percent ethics in government.

Iraq is not only the top issue but the Democrats’ most powerful one;
people who pick it favor Democrats for Congress by 76-21 percent.
They also hold substantial leads on the economy, as noted; and on
health care, a longtime Democratic strength.

Terrorism remains the Republicans’ best issue by far; they lead by
80-17 percent among people who call this their top issue. They also
hold a large lead among immigration voters. For all the attention
paid to the Foley scandal, ethics is the issue that not only ranks
lowest, but cuts least: voters who pick it as their top issue divide
about evenly in their House vote preference.

WOMEN – Men and women are equally critical of the war in Iraq, but
women are more likely to call it the most important issue in their
vote: Thirty-one percent of women say so, making it their top issue
by far. In contrast, men divide between the economy (25 percent) and
Iraq (22 percent).

Women are also 13 points more likely than men to call this election
more important than past congressional elections in their lifetime –
62 percent say so, vs. 49 percent of men. IRAQ – Negative as they
are, views on the war in Iraq are slightly less so than earlier this
month: Then 63 percent said the war was not worth fighting, compared
with 57 percent now. The fundamental point, though, is that a
majority of Americans haven’t endorsed the war since September 2004.

Beyond that rating, 55 percent of Americans are pessimistic about the
situation in Iraq in the year ahead. Many more, 76 percent, say the
war has damaged the United States’ image in the rest of the world.
And for the first time fewer than half, 47 percent, believe the war
has improved the lives of the Iraqi people, down dramatically from 68
percent in June.

Another unsettling result on Iraq is the fact that 45 percent of
Americans think the country is heading for the same kind of
involvement there that it had in Vietnam (including five percent who
think that’s already happened).

Blame, again, is Republican-directed. Fifty-five percent of Americans
say the Republicans in Congress should get a great deal or good
amount of blame for problems relating to the war in Iraq. Far fewer,
35 percent, blame the Democrats.

Moreover, while 55 percent give the Republicans in Congress blame for
Iraq, fewer, 43 percent, give them credit for the fact that there
hasn’t been another terrorist attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11,
2001. Fewer still, 27 percent, credit the Democrats.

HANDLE – Finally, in trust-to-handle ratings among registered voters,
the Democrats have a 13-point lead on ethics, nine points on the
economy, eight points on Iraq and seven points even on handling the
situation with North Korea. It’s essentially a dead heat – Dems +1 –
on trust to handle terrorism.

What’s telling is that the Democrats’ overall lead in congressional
vote preference is larger than their leads on these individual
issues. That, too, suggests that voter preferences are less about
individual Democratic initiatives – and more about broader
discontent, grounded in public unhappiness with the war in Iraq.

METHODOLOGY – This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by
telephone Oct. 19-22, 2006, among a random national sample of 1,200
adults. The results have a three-point error margin. Sampling, data
collection and tabulation by TNS of Horsham, Pa.

Analysis by Gary Langer.

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