Eighty-three percent of respondents disapprove of Congress, according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. Nearly six in 10 want to replace their member of Congress. Just 29% believe the country is on the right track.
Sounds like a recipe for a change election in 2014? Maybe not.
The same NBC/WSJ poll shows that, due to such deeply divided (and gerrymandered) partisan districts, the result could be another neutral political environment with neither party holding the upper hand.
The generic ballot in the poll is tied, with 44% of voters preferring a Democratic-controlled Congress and 44% preferring a Republican-controlled one. In a midterm year, with typically increased GOP turnout, Democrats usually need to have a significant edge on the generic ballot to have an advantage.
But the survey also took a further look at how issues were penetrating in both GOP and Democratic districts, showing even deeper divides that make it harder for the opposite party to win over an increasingly shrinking House battlefield.
Unsurprisingly, in GOP and Democratic districts, views of President Obama are mirror opposites. In GOP districts, 58% said they disapprove of the president; in Democratic districts, 56% approve of the job Obama is doing.









