The State of the Union is pessimistic.
According to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, 63% of Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, compared to just 28% who think we’re headed in the right one. When respondents were asked for a word or phrase to describe how they feel the country is headed, 62% used negative phrases. The most frequently used? “Downhill.”
The survey’s results were released midnight on Tuesday, the same day President Obama is set to deliver his fifth State of the Union address.
The commander-in-chief’s approval ratings sit at just 43%, with 68% saying the country is either in the same or worse off since he took office. Congress fared even worse, with 81% saying they disapproved of the job that Congress is doing with just 13% approving. Although the economy is doing better (the jobless rate is below 7% for the first time in five years), the majority of Americans — 71% — said they were dissatisfied with the economy with only 28% saying they were satisfied.
Obama is expected to tackle economic inequality in his address tonight, with White House officials saying the president will praise measures like expanding access to job training programs and will call again for raising the minimum wage.









