Running Scared

Remember how the uncouth behavior of the Republican rank and file at the August town halls was supposed to scare off independent voters. More than that, their radicalism and racism and generally uncivilized conduct — or at least that’s how MSNBC and the DNC described it — was supposed to drive even moderate Republicans into the arms of the Obama administration, leaving nothing but a rump of Glenn Beck-watching, Michelle Malkin-reading, Sarah Palin-loving Nazis inside the Republican tent. Well, that’s not quite how things are turning out:

President Obama’s strength among independent voters has waned since the 2008 election with more and more unaffiliated voters now identifying with Republicans, according to new data from Gallup. For the first time in more than four years of Gallup polls, more self-described independents now lean toward the Republican Party (15 percent) than toward the Democratic party (13 percent). Those numbers are a far cry from late 2006 — when almost twice as many independents leaned toward Democrats — or even late 2008 when Democratic-leaning independents outnumbered Republican-leaning independents 16 percent to 12 percent. Largely as a result of the movement of independents toward Republican, the wide party identification gap Democrats have enjoyed for the last two elections has shrunk to just six points — 48 percent Democratic, 42 Republican — the smallest that space has been since early 2005.

Imagine what those numbers will look like if the Obama administration maintains its present course — pushing higher energy taxes through cap and trade, meddling with the private health insurance system that 75 percent of Americans are mostly happy with, cutting defense spending, coddling dictators, dithering in the war on terror, relocating terrorists to America’s suburbs. But at least the president is making a strong play for Illinois this week with forceful intervention on behalf of his hometown in the Olympic bidding process.

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