Voters also sent another powerful message for Democrats: Ignore the working class at your peril.
Some 79 percent of voters polled on election night said the most important issue for them was electing a candidate who will strengthen the economy and create more jobs. Controlling health care costs was next on their list, with 54 percent citing that issue as the main determinant of their vote.
The poll [PDF], conducted by Hart Research Associates among 810 voters for the AFL-CIO on the night of the election, also found that although voters without a college degree favored Barack Obama by 21 percentage points in the 2008 election, Democratic candidate Martha Coakley lost that same group by a 20-point margin.
And as AFL-CIO Richard Trumka has pointed out, Massachusetts voters have the same goals for reforming health care, creating good jobs and strengthening the economy as they did in November 2008—but President Obama and the Democrats have done too little.
Voters showed they don’t think Democrats have overreached—they think that the Democrats underreached.
In fact, voters were not worried about Democratic “overreach”—47 percent said their bigger concern about Democrats is that they haven’t succeeded in making needed change rather than tried to make too many changes too quickly (32 percent). Even voters for Scott Brown were more concerned about a lack of change (50 percent) than about trying to make too many changes too quickly (43 percent).
These results puts a lie to the corporate media spin that Democrats have gone “too far” in pushing a reform agenda.
Nor was the election result about health care reform. Brown actually lost among the 59 percent of voters who picked health care as one of their top two voting issues (50 percent for Coakley and 46 percent for Brown). Voters for Brown (55 percent ) were less likely to cite health care as a top issue than were voters for Coakley (66 percent).
The election also should be a wake-up call for those in Washington who support taxing working families’ health care. Voters who thought their health care would be taxed voted by 64 percent for Brown, while those who did not think their health care would be taxed voted by 54 percent to 40 percent for Coakley.
Our polling results show the election was not an endorsement of a Republican agenda or a call to abandon health care reform. Voters strongly disapprove of the job being done by congressional Republicans (26 percent approve and 58 percent disapprove), a much lower rating than they give to congressional Democrats (37 percent approve and 51 percent disapprove).
Other polls show the need for Democrats in Congress to take immediate action to create jobs, reform health care, stop catering to Wall Street and address the needs of America’s working class. As John Judis wrote, the election showed Democrats have lost ground primarily among white working and middle-class voters and senior citizens.
The Suffolk University poll in Massachusetts…singled out two white working-class towns, Gardner and Fitchburg, as bellwethers. Obama won Gardner, where Democrats hold a 3-1 registrations edge, by 59 percent to 31 percent in 2008. Brown won it by 56 percent to 42 percent. Obama won Fitchburg, with a similar Democratic edge, by 60 percent to 38 percent in 2008. Brown won it by 59 percent to 40 percent. That suggests a fairly dramatic shift among white working-class voters.
Summarizing the findings from election night polling conducted by Research 2000 Massachusetts Poll, MoveOn.org said the results show voters worry that Democrats in power “have not done enough to combat the policies of the Bush era.”
Both sets of voters wanted stronger, more progressive action on health care reform as well. In summary, the poll shows that the party who fights corporate interests—especially on making the economy work for most Americans—will win the confidence of the voters.
The working class has spoken. Will Democrats listen?



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And the White House doesn’t seem to have a clue as to what to do. Imagine that. Stunned at their own defeat?
White House: Let’s Let ‘Dust Settle’ On Health Care
Link.
So all those who yelled phred, saleis and I had our heads up our asses might think again. Instead of undermining the progressive agenda an opportunity has been created.
Now what do we do with it?
Hmmm … also check this out: “Unscripted, unvarnished and unedited
Nine representatives on “Move Your Money” and “too big to fail” (http://www.starkreports.com/2010/01/20/nine-representatives-on-move-your-money-and-too-big-to-fail/)
When dealing with the Congress of the United States Of America we must remember that we are dealing with very rich individuals that are and have been invested for years in or have family members invested in and on the boards of many of the largest corporations . In other words , our law makers have been and are making laws for their own benefit . High energy prices , high health insurance rates , high banking fees , high cost health care providing , and cheap labor are all to the benefit of many members of Congress . The very people we hired to design and fund our laws are getting richer from burdening us with a higher cost of living while lying about inflation . Lets not fool ourselves : Health insurance rates can not be reduced without reducing health provider charges also . And that means some corporations must reduce income to improve conditions for the public . After years of gouging us does anyone think Congress is going to give up that pleasure ? The fact that they made laws forbiding us to buy cheaper drugs across our borders pretty much tells us where we stand .
Am I missing the link to your poll? Can’t see it…
Will Democrats listen?
oooh, oooh – I know the answer to that one….
“Voters also sent another powerful message for Democrats: Ignore the working class at your peril”
Tula…are there marijuana dispenseries near your home…what are you smokiing. A Union poll, and an “off the wall” review of that poll, John Edwards was right, there are two America’s. The one most of us live in and the myopic segment you live in!
People have been tasting the shit sausage Congress has been making the last yr. and they’re rejecting it everywhere. That we have no candidates to give them a choice were ending up with right wing Fascists winning. That’s more about how dysfunctional our political system is then anything else. We have more choice in Ice Cream and toilet paper then politicians.
Here’s a link to the summary:
http://www.aflcio.org/issues/politics/upload/mass_elections.pdf
Yep the right wing base they follow. Anything to make the Goper base happy seems to be their rule of thumb.
I would expect taxing income and gas and telephone service and everything else they tax would also be unpopular.
So what’s that got to do with anything?
I found the link to the pdf, but this is not the poll. It’s a memo summarizing the data, but not the data itself, or the questions asked.
I wouldn’t say ‘under-reached’ — the problem is the Democrats have reached in the wrong direction. It’s obvious the entire HCR effort, especially the Senate bill, has been slewed significantly towards enriching the insurance companies, Big Pharma, and related corporations.
We have a mandate — but little to no regulation on the quality of what people get, and no public option. Instead of making insurance affordable, what’s happening is those lucky enough to have decent policies will (or will soon) have them taxed into junk status. People already on the edge don’t want to be told they have to pay a new direct-to-corporate 10-15% income tax for insurance that pays not a thin dime until some obscenely high deductible is met.
To put it even more simply, the bills as they stand impose penalties for people who do not have insurance — but there’s NOTHING in the bill to control how much insurance companies charge in premiums or how often they can still arbitrarily declare certain treatments “off-formulary” or “experimental.”
What we have is the Democratic version of the GOP’s Medicare-D: Crumbs for the citizens, and banquets for wealthy corporations and their CEOs and shareholders. THIS is why we’re unhappy.
MA: Rabble slowly arising!
There will be an outpouring of civil disobedience before the mid terms. no more shock doctrine treatment will be borne by the 95% of the public.
Blowback will be a real bitch, fucktards!
That’s what we have up right now. The data is pretty extensive, not sure about plans to post it.
“Pay no attention to that “D” following my name!”
Critically important poll and post. Thanks. It’s fairly obvious just from the feel of the nation, but Rahm and company don’t want to believe it because it intrudes upon their neo-liberal fantasies. So the quantitative evidence is enormously important.
Rahm and company don’t want to believe it
Is this guy brain-dead or just completely corrupt? How can he not see that he’s engineering a royal ass-kicking of the Dem party? Or maybe he just doesn’t care, given his aspirations for office back in Chicago?
If only the White House would listen
Let’s hope we sent a message to the powers that be ,when we cast or refused to cast our ballots on Tuesday
Know why they won’t listen? When they are booted from office, they have very very high paying jobs waiting for them, until the NEXT election cycle comes along, and then the same idiots are selected by whoever wins. Rethuglicans go the same way. How many administrations were Rumsfeld and Cheney in? How many administrations have Obama’s financial wizards been in? They don’t give two shits. Dem wins, same hacks are part of new government. Rethuglicans win, same thing. You NEVER get rid of these “experts”. EVER.
but, but, they don’t have 60 votes anymore. How will they ever get anything done again? They’ll go back to the same pathetic excuse they have always used.
…voters without a college degree…Martha Coakley lost that same group by a 20-point margin.
Even voters for Scott Brown were more concerned about a lack of change (50 percent) than about trying to make too many changes too quickly (43 percent).
Well, that ‘splains a lot.
So they elected a republican to help ‘get things done’? Puhlease. Maybe voting should be a right only after one passes a basic test assuring that the voter understands both the issues and the candidates’ position on those issues.
p.s. has anyone looked at the Mass vote perhaps being influenced by the state’s own public health system? iow, is Mass an outlier?
: )
It’s also nice to hear Trumka admit that it was a wake up call for them, too. I sent a sternly worded letter to SEIU yesterday complaining about labor rolling over for the Senate bill as long as they got a minor fix to the excise tax.
I’m an optimistic person, I remain hopeful that Dems can turn things around before November. We’ll see…
Rahm….Is this guy brain-dead or just completely corrupt?
Tough call. I vote for “corrupt but not very good at it”.
You may have noticed large amounts of folks around the Lake advocating for electing a right wing R in order to send a message to the Ds to turn left.
they couldn’t get it done with 60 !!
Sounds like a Progressive Poll Tax.
As I said yesterday, Brown and McCain two years ago had the same totals:1.1 million.
Coakley had 900k fewer votes than OB.
Progressives and others stayed home.
Want more. The cities didnt vote.
http://www.boston.com/news/special/politics/2010/senate/results.html
I did a walk through the city and town voting.
The only places with under 50% turnout, and I mean WAY under, are the cities, including Boston, Fall River, New Bedford, Springfield, Lowell, Lawrence, Worcester, North Adams–you get the idea.
Dems stayed away, and some indies, too.
The OB vote disappeared. The young, the Dems in the cities, the progressives. They had somewhere to go Rahm, they stayed away.
There are no turnout figures by registration yet from MA sect of state. so it is guesswork.
but if Coakley had drawn just 15% of OBs overage, she would have won.
The above analysis by the poster, Tula, is good as far as it goes. But the stay-at-home vote is key.
Of course, you get bigger turnout in a presidential, but Coakley only needed a small turnout boost to win.
in order to send a message to the Ds to turn left.
Why does the term “dead letter office” come to mind?
…a Progressive Poll Tax.
After today’s SCt decision, I’m liking the idea even better. That may be the only way Progressives have hope of raising any money at all.
doc dean has it right.
Medicaid boost paid by a tax on million-dollar-and-up incomes, and Medicare buy in for those 55+.
simple. clear. paid for. done by a majority vote in Congress.
want to add ban on pre-existing conditions, recision and drug negotiations for Medicare. do that too.
a vote not cast ,can say as much as one that is
Sorry, but posting the summary without the underlying poll is bullshit.
When the Clintons lost Congress in 94 they visibly turned right, not they were not Wall Street self promoters all along. Obama will do what he will do but he does not suffer the Clintons’ silliness, I am sure of that.
Somebody calculated (sorry, lost link) that because there are so few $1M in the country (something like .3% of population) it would cost each of them between $25,000 and $50,000 each.
Every year.
You actually believe this? Even with Rahm sitting there advising Obama? The same Rahm that I believe you have noted came out of the Clinton WH?
You really must be a true believer.
Exactly! Sadly, you are completely correct in your analysis. These people have it made with all of their fat-cat, old boys/girls networks, corporate board memberships, and so on. Maybe it’s always been this way, but in my adult years, we just seem to get the same corrupt bureaucrats recycled from one admin to other. Sometimes party affiliation doesn’t even matter.
I wouldn’t care about party affiliations, but I do care about abject corruption, no matter how overt or covert.
If Rahmbama is a one-termer, so what? BHO and his fat-cat boys (and a few girls) will all head off to the OK corral of some big sinecure with corporations or lobbying or what have you until the next admin where one of their buddies fingers them for another grab at the taxpayer sponsored gold ring.
There may be a few somewhat more honest politicans out there, but don’t hold your breath looking for them.
Mostly I think we’re just screwed. NPR this morning was lavishly praising the corporations for all the “giant amounts” of dollars they are so graciously “donating” to Haiti relief. It was utterly despicable and laughable. Walmart = $1mill; BoA = $1mill. Gee, that’s chump change for these thieves, and I’m supposed to be giddy with gratitude for the largess? Please: pull the other one. But that’s what it’s coming down to. The United Corporations of America, hallowed by thy many names…
Exactly, the have once again managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
On the up-side, Obama is still young. After his one-term in office maybe he can start building houses for the poor like the last overachiever.
To onitgoes@37
Chump change indeed! When a single BigPharma corp can absorb a 600 million dollar fine, or a billion dollar fine, and merely consider it the cost of doing business, a million dollars–no matter how needed it is–is a pittance.
It appears that Obamarahm noticed something yesterday the way they’re suddenly getting behind Volcker today. I’ll bet it’s mostly posturing following Mass. — we’ll have to see what actually comes of it.
Much as you suggest I see little difference in the Clinton 1.0. and 2.0 versions.
Obama, by saying that he now owes bipartisan negotiations on the health insurance revitalization bill going forward because Brown won is in effect is saying: “Vote against my party and I will bend over backwards to insure that you made the best decision for yourself possible.” If there is a difference between this and the previous Clinton WH it is not a positive one.
And they still claim they need 60 Senate votes or they will keep giving away stuff until they get there. That ought to work real well.
I am.
And here I thought you were somewhat rational even with your Clinton hate and now you show you can be conned as easily as anyone.
Obama don’t know what to do except call Time Out, their little scheme is in a shambles.
Fuck you, Rahm. Fuck you!
I realize this is AFL-CIO propaganda, but that’s okay by me.
Trumpka well expresses my own thoughts, and I’m not even in a union.