Obama approval rating rises after election

WASHINGTON (AP) - A month after the bitterly fought election, President Barack Obama has his highest approval ratings since the killing of Osama bin Laden, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll, and more Americans say the nation is heading in the right direction now than at any time since the start of his first term.
Obama's approval rating stands at 57 percent, the highest since May 2011, when U.S. Navy SEALs killed the terror leader, and up 5 percentage points from before the election. And 42 percent say the country is on the right track, up from 35 percent in January 2009.
A majority think it's likely that the president will be able to improve the economy in his second term.
"Compared to the alternative, I'm more optimistic about government and the economy with him in office," said Jack Reinholt, an independent from Bristol, R.I., who backed Obama in 2008 and again in 2012. "I feel he has the better path laid out."
Still, four years of partisan conflict in Washington have taken a toll on the president's image.
"I'm less enthusiastic about him than the first time he was elected," Reinholt added.
Americans are divided on what kind of president Obama has been, with 37 percent saying he's been above average or outstanding and 36 percent describing his tenure as below average or poor. Another quarter say he's been just average.
Obama held much stronger numbers on this measure at the start of his first term, with two-thirds expecting an above-average presidency. And the public's take on Obama's relative performance has bounced back and forth over his four years in office, moving higher following the death of bin Laden, after declining in the summer of 2010, a few months before the GOP took back control of the House.
Looking ahead to Obama's final four years, most Americans doubt he can reduce the federal budget deficit. But almost 7 in 10 say he will be able to implement the health care law passed in March 2010 and remove most troops from Afghanistan. And most think he'll be able to improve the economy and boost race relations in his final term, though both those figures are down significantly from January 2009.
About a quarter say the economy is in good shape in the new poll, similar to pre-election poll results, but optimism about the economy has dipped since before the election. In October, 52 percent of Americans said they expected the economy to get better in the next year; now, that stands at 40 percent. Among Republicans, the share saying the economy will improve in the coming year has dropped sharply since before the election, from 42 percent in October to 16 percent now.
"The economy, if left alone, will gradually improve because of our people wanting to better themselves and make more money," said Bobby Jordan, 76, a Romney voter from Green Valley, Ariz. "They're going to be doing things to improve their own position, which will collectively mean the economy will gradually get a little better. But (Obama's) not doing anything to improve the economy."
Overall, the public gives Democrats the advantage on handling the economy, 45 percent saying they trust the president's party to do a better job on it, 39 percent favoring Republicans.
As Obama took office four years ago, Republicans were mostly optimistic about his chances for improving the economy, with nearly 7 in 10 saying it was likely the new president could improve it in his first four years in office. Now, just 21 percent of Republicans feel the next four years are that promising. Independents, too, have grown skeptical about Obama's ability to turn around the economy. About three-quarters thought he could fix it in 2009; just a third do now.
Those sharp partisan divides in expectations are represented in the president's approval ratings. About 9 in 10 Democrats say they approve of the way Obama is handling his job, compared with just 2 in 10 Republicans. That gap approaches the 82-point partisan gap in George W. Bush's approval ratings according to Gallup polling in December 2004.
The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted Nov. 29-Dec. 3 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,002 adults nationwide. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points; it is larger for subgroups.
Obama's approval rating stands at 57 percent, the highest since May 2011, when U.S. Navy SEALs killed the terror leader, and up 5 percentage points from before the election. And 42 percent say the country is on the right track, up from 35 percent in January 2009.
A majority think it's likely that the president will be able to improve the economy in his second term.
"Compared to the alternative, I'm more optimistic about government and the economy with him in office," said Jack Reinholt, an independent from Bristol, R.I., who backed Obama in 2008 and again in 2012. "I feel he has the better path laid out."
Still, four years of partisan conflict in Washington have taken a toll on the president's image.
"I'm less enthusiastic about him than the first time he was elected," Reinholt added.
Americans are divided on what kind of president Obama has been, with 37 percent saying he's been above average or outstanding and 36 percent describing his tenure as below average or poor. Another quarter say he's been just average.
Obama held much stronger numbers on this measure at the start of his first term, with two-thirds expecting an above-average presidency. And the public's take on Obama's relative performance has bounced back and forth over his four years in office, moving higher following the death of bin Laden, after declining in the summer of 2010, a few months before the GOP took back control of the House.
Looking ahead to Obama's final four years, most Americans doubt he can reduce the federal budget deficit. But almost 7 in 10 say he will be able to implement the health care law passed in March 2010 and remove most troops from Afghanistan. And most think he'll be able to improve the economy and boost race relations in his final term, though both those figures are down significantly from January 2009.
About a quarter say the economy is in good shape in the new poll, similar to pre-election poll results, but optimism about the economy has dipped since before the election. In October, 52 percent of Americans said they expected the economy to get better in the next year; now, that stands at 40 percent. Among Republicans, the share saying the economy will improve in the coming year has dropped sharply since before the election, from 42 percent in October to 16 percent now.
"The economy, if left alone, will gradually improve because of our people wanting to better themselves and make more money," said Bobby Jordan, 76, a Romney voter from Green Valley, Ariz. "They're going to be doing things to improve their own position, which will collectively mean the economy will gradually get a little better. But (Obama's) not doing anything to improve the economy."
Overall, the public gives Democrats the advantage on handling the economy, 45 percent saying they trust the president's party to do a better job on it, 39 percent favoring Republicans.
As Obama took office four years ago, Republicans were mostly optimistic about his chances for improving the economy, with nearly 7 in 10 saying it was likely the new president could improve it in his first four years in office. Now, just 21 percent of Republicans feel the next four years are that promising. Independents, too, have grown skeptical about Obama's ability to turn around the economy. About three-quarters thought he could fix it in 2009; just a third do now.
Those sharp partisan divides in expectations are represented in the president's approval ratings. About 9 in 10 Democrats say they approve of the way Obama is handling his job, compared with just 2 in 10 Republicans. That gap approaches the 82-point partisan gap in George W. Bush's approval ratings according to Gallup polling in December 2004.
The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted Nov. 29-Dec. 3 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,002 adults nationwide. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points; it is larger for subgroups.
"Fear" ads said he wanted to run our Nation into the ground financially - to make us a third world Country. That me me laugh until ...
Yesterday he asked Congress to give him sole authority to eliminate the Nation's debt ceiling. Imagine that - why would a sitting President ask for Congressional powers? Then I read we are now $19 Trillion in debt. It made me sick.
Voters are just not thinking this through. We don't need a dictator; a homelessman (poor) has never offered me a job yet, but rich people have), and if young adults are ever going to see prosperity where they can retire one day - it needs to start now.
Stop the spending
 @sentryone President Obama promised "change" in his first presidential campaign...and he is right - change for the worse.
hmmm real unemployment rate is way over 10%, all the new jobs created are minimum wage service jobs, not good wage long term employment. 16 trillion in new debt, fiscal cliff await in less than a month, Plan,m what plan, he is winging it and its not pretty. we are all just along for the ride......
We are moving in the right direction if the republicans are whining.
Really? What's he done in the last 30 days to warrant it?
More folks needing assistance?
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1.5 million folks filed for unemployment last month, and we added 150,000 jobs. And the unemployment figures go down?
What's scary is people actually believe this tripe. The IRS has ALL the data to back up any facts. But they are the government.
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Hello Greece!
What's he done? Well, why most of us are still unemployed, he went to Hawaii on our tax dollars. The fiscal cliff doesn't look so bad from the beaches of Maui. Your vote, your voice, your fault.
OBAMA!!! Thank you for winning!
There needs to be some kind of public service campaign against major news networks. They are the cause of Americans not understanding the facts about politics.
 @jowsuf You mean like Fox News?
 @rockguy Fox News, CNN, MSNBC... all of them. All biased faux news garbage.
42% say this country is on the right track... Wow,... because there is 58% that think otherwise... some really good statistics...
@Mr. H Some might be neutral.
I trust Obamas administration more than Dicky Cheney/Bush and his Repubs Party !!!
Why? Our country is by far worse off now.
@bobalouie No it's not.
I approve of Obama because he doesn't send our young men to die in a fantasy religious war against Magog and Gog.
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 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/07/books/review/500-days-by-kurt-eichenwald.html
@lakeview You do know that he sent American troops to fight in Africa. We have soldiers on the gournd in four (4) countries where we never did before.
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Why? Why Africa of all places? What's the need for us to die there?
 @lakeview That's funny, because I disapprove of Obama for sending our young men to Afghanistan to die in something that can hardly be defined anymore.
 @jowsuf  @lakeview You forget to bring up that war and the other ones, not asking the taxpayers to pay for them.  Bush was more than eager to do that and give tax cuts at the same time.
Must be mighty fine punch they are drinking. This clown wants congress to give him an unlimitted debt ceiling. Why? Try calling your credit card company and ask them for no limit on your credit card and see what they say. How can anyone approve of a president that is that irresponsible. Here is a clue for all you that are financially challenged... If he would quit spending more than America has he would not need to raise the debt limit.
 @run4fun Can we seriously stop with the "punch," "kool-aid," and "tin foil hat" garbage? It is BEYOND old and not even relevant at all today. Not one bit.Â
Can we quit blaiming Bush? Can we finally put the blame where it lies?
Can we FINALLY accept the fact that our Country is in DEEP s*** and assess the arbiter in charge?
 @bobalouie If you think this was purely Obama you're in denial. Bush and Obama have both put us and kept us in a bad place as a nation. It isn't even worth taking partisan sides. We haven't had good leadership for a long time.
 @bobalouie The two ten year long wars started under Bush. Not paying for those wars (Tax Cuts) started under Bush. I see nothing to blame Bush for?
@bobalouie âFool me onceâ shrub and âdeficits donât matterâ and âItâs Hoover timeâ darth are mostly responsible for the situation for most of the first decade if not longer and will continue to be held accountable for the Great Recession for decades if not centuries to come. Similar to Hoover. We are now essentially out of one war and another is starting to wind down. Things are starting to turn around in spite of rep foot dragging and obstructionism at every turn. Maybe that is why, as well as many other reasons, those particular approval ratings are going up.
 @jowsuf  @run4fun ok but request an exemption for tin foil undies.
Hilarious...... Many American's don't realize we have already gone over the Fiscal Cliff..... Next year is the proof in the pudding.... When poo hits the fan.... Obama is only a puppet with zero control.... Congress is and always will be the ones who sold America out!
Actually, the Senate is. Don't blame the House as well.
Don't forget to add in the SCotUS. It's just a matter of time before the Constitution and the rights of the people are perverted.
1,002 people.  Where'd they get the phone numbers? Off a dem list?
 @achoo2 Yea your right, the polls that said he would win were wrong and skewed as well.
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Darn those polls!
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 @wynooheeman You care or you wouldn't have posted!
@lakeview bwahahahaâ¦â¦ You got the loony boy to delete his post. Good job.
It must be Obamas fault. ; )
Real world stuff that is actually happening, we are moving in the right direction-until you tune into FOX and things go down hilll.
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I feel sorry for those whom live in the fairy tale land of FOX and Hannity, fox and friends, Palin.........................................
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 @the unvarnished truth  @snoopy84 Not sure what your point is. I do use several sources for my news-always have. I like to turn to FOX to see how out of touch all the non journalist are in the world of  "make believe".
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You do know the owner of FOX is real hot water in England for his unethical news practices. Â You think he runs FOX ant differently?
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I also have list of people I admire and trust from the both sides of the issue.
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So again, what is your point, I did make mine.
@snoopy84 truthless seldom has a point and most points that he believes he might have he usually can not back them up.
 @snoopy84 Ignorance is bliss.
Gee - Obama's really taking America down with him. Highest ratings for years, housing and jobs on the rise, unemployment rate lowest in 4 years.....
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Yup. Taking it right down the toilet is he.....,
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@the unvarnished truth @FormerMarineSgt Democrats took over both houses of congress?
@wynooheeman @the unvarnished truth Yep it is always a step function to your ilk. I.e. shrub_darth are mostly responsible for the situation for most of the first decade if not longer and will continue to be held accountable for the Great Recession for decades if not centuries to come. But yâall would have given all of the credit for any continuing improvements to robmoney and karl if they had actually been able to somehow pull something out of their âvoting boothsâ and robmoney was now prez, gawd forbid. And he/she did forbid. Go figure.