News
OFA Comments On Our Florida Hispanic Voter Survey
An Obama for America memo released today referenced our recent survey among Florida Hispanic voters, conducted with the Hispanic Leadership Network, and read in part: "And a Republican-leaning group poll [Resurgent Republic, 1/26/12] last week showed the President easily beating a generic Republican in Florida and seen favorably by the majority of Hispanic voters in the state...."
Shot/Chaser: Obama's Image and the 2012 Election
Shot: "President Obama has not met with Republican leaders in Congress for 145 days, choosing instead to visit 20 states for 34 policy addresses and 34 campaign speeches." (Richard Wolf, "Observers: Obama has been keeping far afield of Congress," USA Today, 12/16/11)
Chaser: By 53 to 37 percent, Independents believe President Obama is more interested in campaigning against Republicans in Congress to win reelection. (Resurgent Republic, National Survey of Registered Voters, 10/30 - 11/2/11)
Opinion: The right policies and tone can help GOP attract Latinos in 2012
Two-thirds of Latino voters supported President Obama in 2008. Yet based on recent public polling, including a Resurgent Republic survey in Florida, Colorado, and New Mexico, Obama’s support among Latinos has weakened.
That opens the door for the eventual Republican presidential nominee to gain significantly greater Latino support in 2012, which is critical as every month 50,000 more Latinos become eligible to vote.
Winning Among Independent Women
Resurgent Republic has noted the similarities between Independents and Republicans on a host of issues since our first poll in 2009. Conservatives have the upper hand with these voters for now, and the party best able to appeal to Independents in 2012 will win the White House and may well claim both chambers of Congress.
Supercommittee Failure Highlights Obama’s Leadership Deficit
Following the Supercommitee’s failure to reach an agreement, Washington is captivated with postmortems dissecting what went wrong and assigning blame. Congressional Republicans and Democrats have staked out familiar territory with one side rejecting tax increases and the other sweeping entitlement reforms. Yet President Obama is also vulnerable to criticism of his leadership since he remained on the sidelines during this process.
Potholes on the Road to Supercommittee Success
For several years, voters have looked at Washington and said, “Why can’t they do anything?” The easy answer is that partisan politics gets in the way. That’s the portrayal by the media. It’s certainly the picture painted by the President, notwithstanding the point that “We can’t wait” is a much weaker reelection mantra than “Morning in America.”
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Resurgent Republic helps policy makers, think tanks, interest groups and others advocate for policies that are consistent with conservative principles, and to oppose policies that stifle job creation, weaken national security and undermine values that have made America a great country.
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