Posted on 10/21/2003 9:34:35 PM PDT by Jean S
There is some stunning and so far unreported news in a new poll conducted by Democratic strategist Stanley Greenberg.
The survey sponsored by Democracy Corps, the group founded by Greenberg, James Carville and Robert Shrum focused on Democrats who take part in the nominating process in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
What Democracy Corps found was that Democrats, at least those who are most active in politics, simply dont care about terrorism.
Just dont care.
In one question, pollsters read a list of a dozen topics education, taxes, big government, the environment, Social Security and Medicare, crime and illegal drugs, moral values, healthcare, the economy and jobs, fighting terrorism, homeland security, and the situation in Iraq and asked, Which concern worries you the most?
In Iowa, 1 percent of those polled 1 percent! said they worried about fighting terrorism. It was dead last on the list.
Two percent said they worried about homeland security next to last.
In New Hampshire, 2 percent worried about fighting terrorism and 2 percent worried about homeland security.
In South Carolina somewhat surprising because of its military heritage the results were the same.
Democrats in each state were then given the same list of topics and asked to name their second-most concern. Fighting terrorism and homeland security still placed near the bottom of the list.
Then pollsters read two statements and asked respondents to react. The first statement was Americas security depends on building strong ties with other nations, and the second was Bottom line, Americas security depends on its own military strength.
In Iowa, 76 percent of those polled said they agreed with the first statement. Just 18 percent favored the second.
In New Hampshire, 77 percent favored the first and 17 percent the second.
In South Carolina, 56 percent favored the first statement and 33 percent the second.
Given those opinions, one might expect Democrats to care little about the national security credentials of their candidates. But the poll found just the opposite.
Pollsters asked respondents which characteristics they believed would be most important in a candidate. While voters didnt care about having a decorated war veteran as a candidate sorry, Sen. Kerry and Gen. Clark the one attribute they said is most important is that the candidate has experience in foreign affairs, intelligence and national security.
Combined with other results, that suggests Democrats want a leader who has the ability to fight terrorism but will not actually do it.
On Iraq, the party faithfuls feelings are complicated, if not schizophrenic.
In one section of the survey, the Democracy Corps pollsters read two statements. The first said, I want a Democratic nominee who opposed the Iraq war from the beginning, and the second said, I want a Democratic nominee who supported military action against Saddam Hussein but was critical of Bush for failing to win international support for the war.
Democrats favored the second statement 59 percent in Iowa, 58 percent in New Hampshire and 50 percent in South Carolina.
Those are not huge margins, but they seem to indicate some support for the war.
Yet in another portion of the survey, when pollsters asked Democrats how important it would be for a candidate to have opposed the war in Iraq from the beginning, 68 percent in Iowa said that was very or somewhat important.
In New Hampshire, the number was 59 percent, and in South Carolina it was a whopping 74 percent.
The message may be that Democrats at heart want a candidate who opposed the war all along, but sense that it would be more politically practical to support a candidate who straddled the issue.
Finally, the pollsters read respondents a series of position statements from four fictional candidates.
One said that the Iraq war [has] hurt our country but did not mention terrorism. Two others did not mention either the war or terrorism and instead stressed such things as repealing the Bush tax cuts and reforming healthcare.
Just one fictional candidate said, I am committed to fighting the war on terrorism and supported overthrowing Saddam Hussein. But we must abandon Bushs go-it-alone policy and work with our allies so they provide more forces and bear more of the cost.
That anti-terrorism, modified-pro-war candidate finished next to last in Iowa and South Carolina just a percentage point out of the bottom spot. (He did better in New Hampshire, for reasons that are not clear).
The bottom line is that if a Democrat wins the White House next year and listens to his partys most ardent supporters, he will simply shut down the war on terrorism.
Of course, no president would do that or at least do so as abruptly as his followers might want but the Democracy Corps poll suggests that, whatever else it is about, the 2004 election will decide whether Americans want to keep fighting terrorism or not.
Then Liberals are too stupid to vote. We need a new poll test!
They just love billy the boob, after all he pardon terrorists who tried to kill a sitting us president.
What more would you expect of the demorats.
Look at Dean and his speeches before American Muslim groups. The only word for his behavior is "prostitution". And the only reason is the all-consuming desire for power.
The most ardent on the left live for their causes. From their point-of-view, it is someone else's job to keep them safe. Noone can stop them from ignoring certain facts of life.
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