Favorability among Democrats up sharply, down among Republicans
Highest McCain favorable rating since November 2008
Rare for politician's party base to be less positive than other party
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Arizona Sen. John McCain's favorable rating is
58% after he cast the vote that sank GOP attempts to repeal the Affordable
Care Act. That is five points higher than McCain's previous reading
from August 2015, with a surge in Democratic favorability more than making
up for a decline among McCain's fellow Republicans.
Democratic Gain More Than Offsets Republican Decline to Boost Overall McCain
Image Ratings
Figures are the percentage who have a favorable opinion of McCain
August 2015
August 2017
Change
%
%
pct. pts.
U.S. adults
53
58
+5
Democrats
49
71
+22
Independents
50
54
+4
Republicans
61
51
-10
Gallup
The results are based on an Aug. 2-6 Gallup poll, conducted shortly after
McCain returned to the Senate from his home in Arizona after having emergency
surgery and finding out he had an aggressive form of brain cancer. The
return of the self-described "maverick" was eventful, as he
joined with two Republicans, 46 Democrats and two independents to oppose
the latest -- and, for now, final -- GOP attempt to repeal "Obamacare."
Additionally, since Gallup last measured opinions about McCain, he and
Donald Trump have had a contentious relationship that includes disagreement
on many policy issues and Trump's criticism of McCain for being captured
in the Vietnam War.
Democrats now view McCain much more positively than they did two years
ago, with their 71% favorable ratings representing a 22-percentage-point
increase since then. Republicans' opinions have grown more negative,
though their 10-point decline (from 61% to 51%) is about half as large
as the Democratic increase. Independents' opinions of McCain are virtually
the same as they were two years ago.
The net effect of these changes is that McCain's 58% favorable rating
among all Americans is improved from 2015 and is his best since a 64%
reading in November 2008, shortly after he lost the presidential election
to Democrat Barack Obama. Since Gallup first asked about him in 1999,
McCain's favorable rating has been as high as 67%, including in March
2008 after he clinched the Republican presidential nomination and in February
2000 after he defeated George W. Bush in the New Hampshire Republican
presidential primary.
Patterns of Party Support for McCain Highly Unusual
The Democratic and Republican shifts in opinions of McCain have created
a rare instance in which a politician receives better ratings from supporters
of the opposition party than from his own party's base.
Gallup has documented only one other case in which a politician had significantly
higher ratings from the opposition party than from his own party. McCain's
friend and former Senate colleague, Democrat Joe Lieberman of Connecticut,
had higher ratings among Republicans than Democrats in two 2006 polls.
Lieberman's consistent support for the Iraq War was at odds with most
elected Democrats' views, and his pro-war positions caused Democratic
identifiers to sour on him while Republicans came to view him positively.
By July 2006, when the incumbent Lieberman was engaged in a spirited primary
campaign he ultimately lost,
Republicans rated Lieberman better than Democrats did.
The last time Gallup measured opinions of Lieberman, in September 2006
after he decided to seek re-election to his seat as an independent, 53%
of Republicans and 35% of Democrats rated him favorably.
For most of Gallup's trend on McCain, the typical partisan pattern
has held, with Republicans rating him more positively than Democrats have.
However, from 2001 through mid-2006, the time in between his two presidential
bids, Republicans and Democrats gave McCain roughly similar favorable ratings.
After McCain won the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, his ratings
were the most politically polarized of his career, including a 71-point
party difference in the final pre-election poll, when 93% of Republicans
and 22% of Democrats had a favorable opinion of him. Wide
partisan gaps in views of presidential nominees are the norm.
Since the 2008 election, Republicans' favorable ratings have returned
to more normal levels for the senator. However, the current 51% of Republicans
rating him favorably ties for the lowest by that group since he became
a well-known national figure in late 1999. Meanwhile, Democrats' 71%
rating is their highest for McCain to date.
Bottom Line
McCain's decision to oppose the latest Obamacare repeal effort has
endeared him to many Democrats while turning off some Republicans. His
ongoing battles with Trump may be producing a similar effect. Now, Democrats,
just 22% of whom viewed McCain favorably when he faced Obama in the 2008
election, rate him much more positively than Republicans do. Overall,
McCain remains fairly popular and slightly more so than his average favorability
of 54% since 1999.
Given the unique nature of McCain's ratings by party, it is unclear
how long he can sustain his high ratings among Democrats. He has voted
against his party on occasion -- most notably on campaign finance reform
-- but in the past, Democrats' ratings of McCain were at best on par
with those of Republicans. Ultimately, how much McCain's recent actions
stand out in partisans' memories compared with other things he has
done over the past two decades will determine their opinions about him.
Results for this Gallup poll are based on telephone interviews conducted
Aug. 2-6, 2017, with a random sample of 1,017 adults, aged 18 and older,
living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. For results
based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error
is ±4 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. All reported
margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.
Each sample of national adults includes a minimum quota of 70% cellphone
respondents and 30% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas
by time zone within region. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are
selected using random-digit-dial methods.