By: Jeffrey Klein
Political Buzz Examiner

Most everyone would agree that June has gotten off to a bumpy start for President Barack Obama, who has seen a dozen high profile surrogates side with Team Romney against his negative Bain Capital attack ads, countless classified covert operation detail leaks from inside the White House, Attorney General Eric Holder about to be hung by Congress, and finally, the brutal backlash from his straight-faced “the private sector is fine” statement.

And it’s just getting worse, day by day.

Now, a group that was founded by longtime Democratic strategist James Carville and pollster Stanley Greenberg, called Democracy Corps, released a memo this past Monday, which was based on the analysis of results from focus group sessions held with residents of two important battleground states: Ohio and Pennsylvania, according to a NewsCore article yesterday.

The high highlights from the memo read…

“What is clear from this fresh look at [the] public consciousness [regarding] the economy, is how difficult this period [prolonged recession with high unemployment] has been for both non-college-educated and college-educated voters–and how vulnerable the prevailing narratives articulated by national Democratic leaders are.

We will face an impossible headwind in November if we do not move to [fabricate] a new narrative … that contextualizes the recovery but, more importantly, focuses on what we [Obama] will do to make a better future for the middle class.”

Then, Ed Henry’s FOXNews article today supplied an even more critical set of passages from the same memo, which reads…

“It is [Democrat] elites who are creating a conventional wisdom that an incumbent president must run on his economic performance–and therefore must convince voters that things are moving in the right direction.

They are wrong, and that will fail.

The voters are very sophisticated about the character of the economy; they know who is mainly responsible for what went wrong and they are hungry to hear the President talk about the future.

They know we are in a new normal, where life is a struggle–and convincing them that things are good enough for those who have found jobs is a fool’s errand.

They want to know the [President’s] plans for making things better in a serious way–not just focused on finishing up the work of the recovery.”

Basically, Carville’s memo says that the facts regarding the continuingly terrible state of the U.S. economy during President Barack Obama’s first-term as president, have erected an impenetrable wall between him and his reelection in November, and he succumb to “it’s about the economy stupid,” the exact same reason that President George H.W. Bush lost against President Bill Clinton in 1992.

And ironically, James Carville should know, as he was largely responsible for orchestrating Bill Clinton’s victory that year–followed by his reelection four years later.

So, what did Barack Obama say during a fundraiser at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia on Tuesday night–before attending an amazing six fundraisers in a row?

“They’re [voters] not following … the ups and downs, the ins and outs of this [presidential] campaign.

But they do have a sense of what’s true.

They have pretty good instincts about what works and they’re not persuaded that an economy built on the notion that everybody here is on their own is somehow going to result in a stronger, more prosperous America.

So our job is to just make sure that we get that message out.”

Maybe that is why Gov. Mitt Romney remarked…

“He’s had a number of very revealing comments that show just how far out of touch he is with what’s happening in the country.

The president has the most anti-business, anti-investment, anti- jobs administration I think I’ve ever seen. And the people in this country want to see people who have private sector experience who know what it takes to get the private sector hiring again.”

It appears as though Barack Obama will maintain his collision course toward November, playing right into the hands of Mitt Romney, who will continue his course of hammering him on the horrible economy, including this morning in Washington, D.C., while speaking to the Business Roundtable, which is a group of CEOs from top American companies–before heading to Ohio later for a [single] fundraiser.

Finally, remember the voters who are supposedly “not following this campaign?”

Well, they are actually not following the president, by greater numbers each day, as Rasmussen’s “Daily Presidential Tracking Poll” reveals that Romney has increased his lead over Obama 48 to 44 percent–outside the margin of error.