By

David L Miller /

CBS/ February 11, 2009, 4:21 PM

A Name You Can Trust?

Eboseremhen Eigbe, of Galloway, N.J., yawns during the second round of National Spelling Bee, Wednesday, May 30, 2012, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Eboseremhen Eigbe, of Galloway, N.J., yawns during the second round of National Spelling Bee, Wednesday, May 30, 2012, in Oxon Hill, Md. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) / Evan Vucci

By Kathy Frankovic, CBS News director of surveys

Do names matter?

Barack Obama raised this question at the Democratic Convention in 2004, when he described himself as "a skinny kid with a funny name, who believes that America has a place for him, too." But does his "funny" name really matter to voters? What can pollsters find out about how open the American public is to candidates whose names (and backgrounds) are different from those of typical presidential candidates?

It takes time for rare or unusual names to be accepted. In the Broadway hit "Fiorello" (the story of Fiorello LaGuardia – the former mayor of New York City) by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, a group of Republican Party bosses turn their poker game into a search for a candidate to face the powerful Tammany political machine, a search for "Some qualified Republican who's willing to lose." One possible candidate with a polysyllabic ethnic name is rejected because, as one of them sings: "Nobody likes a candidate whose name they can't spell!"

John Kennedy's obviously urban Irish background, along with his Catholicism, was new to many voters in 1960. The 1988 Democratic presidential nominee Mike Dukakis, the first U.S.-born member of his family, had name issues with some voters. During his campaign, the country singer Loretta Lynn pointed out that Dukakis was simply not her kind of politician…. "Why, I can't even pronounce his name!'"

There don't seem to have been any polls taken that year about Mike Dukakis's name and how it affected voters. But in the most recent CBS News poll, we tried to see how voters reacted to the name "Barack Obama." It was hard to formulate such a question. Media pollsters who are measuring public opinion (as compared to the candidates' own pollsters, who may be trying to learn how to influence voters) don't want to put ideas into people's minds. We need to learn what ideas are there already.

So in the latest CBS News Poll we asked a number of questions that we hoped would tell us whether Obama's name was an issue. For some people, about 10 percent of registered voters, it was actually top-of-mind. For nearly four times as many, it was a worry, perhaps not for them personally, but for how it might affect other voters.

Late in the questionnaire, we reminded registered voters of the speech at the 2004 Democratic Convention that had catapulted Obama to public consciousness, and in which he'd said he had a "funny name." We then asked "Do you think many people would have a problem voting for him because of his name, or not?" Thirty-eight percent said many voters would have a problem voting for him because of it. And while that doesn't mean the individual respondent would, it clearly says something about their perception of other Americans, and perhaps other Americans they know. More Republicans than Democrats (45 percent to 36 percent) say it will be a problem with voters.

For some people, the concern was personal. Long before we asked the question that mentioned Obama's name and his characterization of it, and before we mentioned any of the Democratic candidates, we asked this question: "Other than running for President, what is the first thing that comes to mind when you hear the name Obama?"

Ten percent of registered voters said the first thing that came to their mind when they heard the name was the foreignness of it, and/or a perceived association with "Osama bin Laden." And those voters who did NOT have a favorable opinion of Obama were twice as likely as those with a favorable opinion to mention this. Those who thought his name would affect others also were more likely to be thinking of it themselves. Nearly one in five of those who said that they thought many voters would have a problem voting for Obama because of his name said in the earlier poll question that the name's non-American associations were the first thing they thought of when they heard his name.

Name and ethnicity work together, of course. And Obama's race is part of voters concern, especially for African-Americans. In our polls, black voters have consistently been more likely than white voters to say America might not yet be ready for a black president, although they do think Obama could win the presidency if he won the Democratic nomination.

Obama could overcome this problem, because the foreign connection is much more likely to be made by those who are paying less attention to the campaign than by those paying closer attention: Fourteen percent of those paying little or no attention to the campaign say it's the first thing that comes to mind when they hear Obama's name, compared with just 7 percent of those paying at least some attention.

As Obama keeps campaigning, and as voters start paying more attention, pollsters like me will continue to try and find out what voters see and whether their focus moves beyond his name, to the candidate himself and his platform.
By Kathy Frankovic
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
20 Comments Add a Comment
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kansas1946 says:
I am white, middle-class, former Republican, now Independent, in my sixites, and I love Barack Obama and would not be the least bit worried about him being president. We have a sociopathic liar running the country right now and people are going to worry about a name??
If that is all that the American people can focus on, then we deserve what we get. Sub-standard leaders.
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toongal4u says:
I really believe the majority of white people do not know how bigoted they really are, and this includes the media. And I believe black people who are against Obama will always continue to live with a noose around their necks. If the media hadn''t started this another anti-Obama-ism, the public wouldn''t be stirring it up. Just your quote here: "As Obama keeps campaigning, and as voters start paying more attention, pollsters like me will continue to try and find out what voters see and whether their focus moves beyond his name, to the candidate himself and his platform."
So it is not the voters who are focused on Obama''s name, it is YOU, bigoted you, who don''t want to move beyond his ''name''. Are the American people so brainwashed, so spoiled ''Americanized'' they cannot accept a president with an unusal name? Maybe. But I also think creating this headline is another media attempt to turn voters away from Obama. So what, his name isn''t Bobby or Harry. I think you and the rest of the media need to grow up, and expand your mind, like this great red-blooded AMERICAN man running for the presidency has done and is doing in his cause to bring together one America! And I suggest you and the rest of the media get on board, because you all, more than any, it seems, need Obama''s "Change for America"!!! And if that doesn''t do, reach down into his other heritages and simply extract -- his Irish.

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charliemudca says:
I think the results of this poll are mostly reflective of worries that voters will have problems with his name rather than actual bias against his name. Yes, there are a few wackos out there (you can find their postings everywhere) who love to say "Obama Osama" and think they are really clever. However, the vast majority of people who express concern about his name are concerned that OTHERS have problems with his name, rendering him unelectable. It is the same difficulty they have visualizing a black president. Nonetheless, I have the "audacity of hope" that says these misgivings can be overcome if we are just willing to believe that the majority of Americans are capable of seeing a great visionary in Barack Obama and getting beyond the superficial aspects of his name and his color. I, for one, have the audacity to suggest we will all be saying "President Obama" in January 2009. I am not willing to support someone other than Senator Obama for such idiotic reasons.
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delanovanover says:
http://www.freedomsenemies.com/_more/obama.htm

Above is a website every American should visit if they want to understand Obama.

It''s only my opinon but I do believe Obama to be a danger to America.

You know a person by the company they keep, and Obama associates with many suspect people and organizations.
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katg21 says:
katg21, your vapid comments as usual, are so shallow as to be just the scum on the puddle, not even the water itself. Shameful!
Posted by WogerWabbit at 09:55 PM : Aug 22, 2007

Touche''
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wogerwabbit says:
katg21, your vapid comments as usual, are so shallow as to be just the scum on the puddle, not even the water itself. Shameful!
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gcgray-2009 says:
not now.I am 71 after Sen Clinton is in two terms I will be 80 so I won;t have to much to fuss about then he might change his mine.
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katg21 says:
Me, I just keep getting Obama and Osama''''s names mixed up.
Posted by One_American at 05:26 PM : Aug 22, 2007

Now that''s funny! Barack HUSSEIN Obama...we''d have to be crazy.
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peter776-2009 says:
It''s quite simple. No one with the middle name of "Hussein" will ever sit in the White House.
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one_american says:
"Voters don''''t need to spell or pronounce "Barak Obama" for him to win, they only need to be able to read "Democrat" on the ballot."

Posted by random_radar at 02:33 PM : Aug 22, 2007


That, unfortunately, probably describes the majority of voters who would vote for him; just-vote-for-anything-with-a-"D"-behind-their-name, seems to be their main strategy.

Me, I just keep getting Obama and Osama''s names mixed up.

Maybe it''s because Obama wants to meet and have tea with terrorist-supporting dictators, and conversely, wants to bomb our friends and allies...
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