As the deadline neared for the nation’s first-ever war-time government shutdown, the consensus was that congressional Republicans, already unpopular, would feel the brunt of the public backlash. So far, those expectations were correct.
A Washington Post/ABC News poll released yesterday found widespread dissatisfaction across the board, but Americans’ attitudes towards Republicans are especially brutal.
Republicans might take some solace in the fact that no one in Washington is faring especially well right now, but there’s just not much of a silver lining for the GOP. ABC’s Gary Langerexplained, “In another way to look at the results, Obama’s gone from 41-50 percent approve-disapprove last week to 45-51 percent now — a 9-point negative margin then, a similar 6-point negative margin today. The Democrats likewise show little change overall (from a 22- to a 26-point negative gap). But the Republicans have gone from 26-63 percent approve-disapprove to 24-70 percent, an initial 37-point difference widening now to a 46-point negative result.”
Greg Sargent dug a little deeper into the results and found that among Americans who describe themselves as “moderates” or “independents,” disapproval has reached 73%.
The right might also suggest these results should be taken with a grain of salt because it’s just one poll. Perhaps. But let’s not forget that CBS News, CNN, and the Pew Research Centeralso released post-shutdown polls, and all of them found Republicans receiving the blame for the crisis.
In theory, this should push Republican lawmakers into accepting the conservative compromise Democrats are already prepared to accept. That, however, is unlikely.
The American mainstream may be repulsed by the GOP’s extremism, but the Washington Post/ABC poll also found that self-identified “conservative” and “very conservative” votersactually approve of Republicans’ antics.








