A new USA Today/Gallup
poll finds Americans evenly divided on health care
legislation following President Obama's address to a joint
session of Congress, with 50 percent supporting it and 47 percent
opposing it. At the same time, just 38 percent say it will
accomplish its goals, and just 43 percent approve of Obama's
handling of the health care issue.
"The president's speech apparently failed to galvanize public
opinion in the way the White House had hoped," USA Today
article concludes. "While it drew a national television audience
estimated by Nielsen at more than 32 million people, there's
little evidence in the survey that it changed minds."
Meanwhile, Rasmussen, which had been showing a steady rise in
support for health care legislation following Obama's speech,
today
revealed new numbers showing that, "the bounce appears to be
over. The latest daily tracking shows that support has fallen all
the way back to pre-speech levels."
Yesterday, I
noted an ABC/Washington Post
poll that found a negligible impact on public opinion -- 46
percent supported legislation and 48 opposed after the speech,
compared with 45 percent support and 50 percent opposition in the
previous poll, taken mid August.