One word seems to define the American public’s mood more than 13 months until Election Day 2016 — anger.
According to the new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, 62% of respondents believe the country is headed in the wrong direction – the 59th-straight NBC/WSJ poll over the past six years when a majority thinks things are on the wrong track.
A plurality of adults feel angry because the American political system seems to be working for those with money and power.
And more than half of Americans — 55% — say that something upsets them enough that they’d carry a protest sign for an entire day if they could.
The one hitch: The public is divided over the source of this anger.
The top responses from Republicans on the protest sign they’d carry: “Stop Abortion”; “Enforce Immigration Laws”; “Defund Planned Parenthood”; “Impeach Obama.”
“These statements read more like headlines in the news,” says Democratic pollster Peter Hart, whose firm conducted this survey with Republican pollster Bill McInturff. “Yes, there is anger, but it is not galvanized.”
Growing optimism about the economy
Still, there is some optimism from the public when it comes to the economy. Fifty-three percent of Americans say they’re “confident and optimistic” about their own financial situation over the next year, versus 45% who are “worried and uncertain.”
That’s a reversal from the beginning of the financial crisis in Sept. 2008, when 58% were worried and uncertain.








