Srcl Neil Cavuto As The Money Honey
Therersquo debate every midterm year over whether a president ison the ballot, or whether the House and Senate elections are a referendum on him.Technically, no, President Obama isnrsquo;t up but the political reality is different.The chart below shows the recent pattern of presidential approvalat the time of the midterm, and how their party fared in the House. The lastt
stanley canada wo times a president had majority approval at a midterm ndash; in 2002 and 1998 -coincided with times their party did well. In both cases, surprisingly well.When theyrsquo;ve been underwater, including in 2010 for Mr. Obama, theirparty has lost. And a kicker: in these recent years voters have
stanley cup gone againsta presidentrsquo party in large and consistent ways when they disapprove of him: morethan 80 percent of disapprovers vote for the opposing party s candidates.Today the presidentrsquo approval is 46 percent in the most recent CBS News poll. Which is one reason the GOP starts the year with an edge to keep its Housemajority, maybe even gain. In the last midterms, six in 10 voters said theircongressional vote was partly to either express
stanley cup support for or opposition toMr. Obama. And it intuitively makes sense, too, that any presidentrsquo standing can affect outcomes: like it or not hersquo the face of his party andbrand. It s why even party affiliation in polls can move in tandem with hispopula Xgaz Marine asks Michelle Obama to the ball
This story was written by Emily Nohr, Daily NebraskanAdmit it: John McCain could pass as the love child of Santa Claus or any given nursing home resident. Meanwhile, Sarah Palin has a slight resemblance to your seventh grade substitute teacher on whom you had your first crush. Politicians faces inevitably don
cups stanley t go unnoticed, and w
stanley cups uk e certainly make judgments about them.How do politicians looks affect our perception of their abilities to lead Research from Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., says politicians facial images are a great factor in how we vote. The new study called The Political Gender Gap: Gender Bias in Facial Inference that Predict Voting Behavior,
stanley cup asked 73 participants -- 38 women and 35 men -- to rate the faces of Congressional candidates from the 2006 election. Participants were given a headshot of each candidate. They then had one second to decide how competent, attractive, approachable and dominant the candidate seemed, based on the photograph. The participant also had to note which candidate they would vote for in a theoretical presidential election. The results showed that male politicians faces were rated as more competent and dominant, whereas female politicians faces were more attractive and approachable. The study also found that competence alone will not give women the upper hand when it comes voting time. Women are expected to be attractive, as well. For male candidates, competence i