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Bob Schieffer's take: Kerry Picked Wrong Fight, And Paid
CBS News ^
| September 20, 2004
| Bob Schieffer
Posted on 09/22/2004 1:31:37 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
(CBS) Historically, when polls show that voters feel the country is headed in the wrong direction and that they are worried about the presidents handling of the economy, that president, whoever he is, is going to have a tough time getting re-elected.
Add on voter worry about this presidents handling of the war in Iraq and you would think that that would make it very hard for him to win re-election.
Yet, the new CBS News/New York Times poll suggests all of the above, but it also reports something else -- that George Bush has now opened a 9-point lead over John Kerry.
You dont have to be an expert to figure this out. Voters may be less than enamored with President Bush but they are even more uneasy about John Kerry whose plans for the country remain a mystery, according to this poll.
For that, Kerry and his people must take most of the blame.
I can remember how they told me at the Boston convention that if they could beat George Bush on the national security issue, they could beat him. That may have been true in theory, but they chose the wrong example, it seems to me, to argue their case.
Instead of Iraq, they focused on Vietnam, a war that came out badly nearly three decades ago, before many voters were even born.
Now they have discovered the sad and dirty secret about Vietnam: It is the one war that many Americans want to forget, not remember. Vietnam brought down many a man. It threatens now to bring down another.
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bias; cbs; danrather; federalelection; forgery; fraud; kerry; oldmedia
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To: All
I wonder what his "take" is on Dan Rather.
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Bob Schieffer is one of the good guys.
3
posted on
09/22/2004 1:36:49 AM PDT
by
leadpenny
To: Cincinatus' Wife
I think if you replace "Kerry" with "Rather" it would be a good start on the actual feelings he won't admit to. But nobody at CBS is willing to admit the problem yet - look how long it took to admit the documents were fake.
4
posted on
09/22/2004 1:39:38 AM PDT
by
Bernard
(Let Freedom Reign)
To: Bernard
Sounds like someone really (I mean REALLY) wants to moderate a debate.
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Bob's basic premise, as set forth in the 1st paragraph, is wrong:
Gallup.com
by Joseph Carroll, Senior Staff Writer
Many political observers point to measures of national satisfaction (whether the United States is on the right or wrong track) as key indicators of a president's election prospects. Since 1979, Gallup has asked Americans, "In general, are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way things are going in the United States at this time?" Polling over the past two months finds overall satisfaction in the 40% range, meaning a majority of Americans are dissatisfied with the course of the nation. Does this sole measure indicate that George W. Bush is therefore likely to be defeated by Democratic challenger John Kerry in November? The answer is no.
Since Gallup first started asking this satisfaction question, there have been four presidential elections with an incumbent president seeking re-election. In two of those races, satisfaction, along with other key measures, was at exceedingly low levels, and the incumbents eventually lost. In the other two elections, satisfaction was not much different from what Gallup is currently measuring, and both of those incumbent presidents won re-election rather easily.
1980
Gallup did not ask the mood of the nation question during the 1980 presidential race between Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter and Republican challenger Ronald Reagan. However, the question was asked several times in 1979 and again in 1981.
The results from these polls show that satisfaction was low during the latter part of Carter's administration. In February 1979, about a quarter of Americans said they were satisfied with the way things were going. This sentiment declined to 12% in July before increasing to 19% in November of that year.
Just prior to Reagan taking office, a mid-January 1981 poll found 17% of Americans satisfied with the state of the nation. Satisfaction eventually rose to 33% during Reagan's first several months in office.
It is reasonable to hypothesize that had Gallup taken this measure in 1980 (that is, between the 19% reading in November 1979 and the 17% reading in January 1981), satisfaction levels during Carter's re-election campaign probably would have been similarly low.
http://media.gallup.com/GPTB/goverPubli/20040824b_1.gif 1984
In 1984, the year Reagan won his re-election bid in a landslide against Democratic challenger Walter Mondale, nearly as many Americans were dissatisfied as were satisfied with the way things were going in the country. In February 1984, half of Americans said they were satisfied with the way things were going and 46% were dissatisfied. In late September/early October, the figures were similar: 48% satisfied and 45% dissatisfied.
http://media.gallup.com/GPTB/goverPubli/20040824b_2.gif At 48%, satisfaction in the last poll before the 1984 presidential election was only four percentage points higher than it is in Gallup's most recent poll this year (44%).
1992
Throughout George H.W. Bush's re-election campaign against Democratic challenger Bill Clinton, satisfaction with the state of the union was low. During the first five months of 1992, the percentage of Americans who said they were satisfied averaged 21%. Satisfaction decreased to 14% in mid-June, and about a month and a half later, it edged up just slightly to 17%. By late August and early September, roughly one in five Americans (22%) were satisfied with the way things were going.
http://media.gallup.com/GPTB/goverPubli/20040824b_3.gif A week after Clinton defeated Bush, satisfaction only increased four points, to 26%, in mid-November
1996
Clinton beat Republican challenger Bob Dole by nearly nine points in the 1996 election. Yet, over the first five months of 1996, public satisfaction ranged from a low of 24% (in January) to a high of 41% (in March). By mid-August, 38% of Americans were satisfied with the way things were going. This increased to 45% at the end of August and early September before decreasing to 39% in late October.
http://media.gallup.com/GPTB/goverPubli/20040824b_4.gif Satisfaction during the 1996 campaign was slightly lower, on average, than it is so far this year. From January through October 1996, an average of 37% of Americans said they were satisfied with the state of the nation. This compares with an average of 43% for the first eight months of this year.
2004
The most recent Gallup Poll, conducted Aug. 9-11*, finds 44% of Americans saying they are satisfied with the way things are going. The results are actually the highest Gallup has measured since February of this year. Between March and July, satisfaction has ranged from a low of 36% to a high of 41%. The public's satisfaction with the state of the nation averaged 49% in January and February.
http://media.gallup.com/GPTB/goverPubli/20040824b_5.gif Bottom Line
The majority of Americans, according to a mid-August Gallup Poll, are not satisfied with the state of the nation today. However, an analysis of satisfaction in other years in which incumbents sought re-election suggests that this current level of satisfaction doesn't mean Bush won't win re-election this November.
The limited historical data available suggest no clear correlation between "lower than 50%" satisfaction levels and incumbent defeat. The most recent two incumbents who won re-election (Clinton and Reagan) did so at a time when satisfaction levels were at or below 50%. The data also show that recent unsuccessful incumbents lost their bids at times when national satisfaction was substantially lower than it is now.
Gallup has found that presidential approval ratings are a better predictor of re-election success than are overall satisfaction levels, and Bush currently has 51% job approval -- which puts him above presidents who have been defeated for re-election, but also below presidents who have won re-election.
*Results are based on telephone interviews with 1,017 national adults, aged 18 and older, conducted Aug. 9-11, 2004. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points.
6
posted on
09/22/2004 1:43:37 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(http://www.swiftvets.com)
To: leadpenny
He's usually ruthless on W, and I've gotten to the point where I can't listen to him. Heard him on Imus the other morning and he didn't exactly support Gunga Dan. He also hid behind a lack of technical expertise to be able to tell is the documents were phoney. His bio says he was a reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Fact is most reporters understand typography to some extent. If you work at a newpaper, it's a way of life.
He should NOT be one of the moderators in the debates. Time for Fox to get a spot.
7
posted on
09/22/2004 1:44:08 AM PDT
by
ProudVet77
(02NOV04 - A date which will live in Pajama Party history.)
To: ProudVet77
He's usually ruthless on W I've never sensed that. He certainly would have been a better successor to Kronkite. As for the mods, Brian Lamb should be doing all of the debates.
8
posted on
09/22/2004 1:49:32 AM PDT
by
leadpenny
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Vietnam brought down many a man. It threatens now to bring down another. Only one problem: Kerry is no man.
President Bush, on the other hand...now that's a man.
9
posted on
09/22/2004 1:58:42 AM PDT
by
Prime Choice
(The Religion of Peace ISN'T.)
To: ambrose
Thank you ambrose, for shedding some light on the subject!
To: ProudVet77
...Time for Fox to get a spot.Bump!
To: Cincinatus' Wife
WAITAMINUTE - you mean, someone still bothers to check out the news at CBS?!?
12
posted on
09/22/2004 2:01:20 AM PDT
by
Mudcat
To: Prime Choice
You're right. Kerry is a flip-flopper not a man.
As Kelly Ann said last night on John Gibson's "Big Story," 'Women like complex men with simple ideas, not simple men with complex ideas.'
The topic was women and their choice for president and how they're moving toward Dubya (the protector).
Her Democrat counterpart could only smile and nod.
It was a telling remark and scene.
To: Mudcat
To: leadpenny
Any journalist who refers to President Bush as "George Bush", shouldn't moderate anything, including his own TV show.
15
posted on
09/22/2004 2:07:29 AM PDT
by
BigSkyFreeper
(Real gun control is - all shots inside the ten ring)
To: leadpenny
Expanding on my previous post. I'm just sick and tired of the partisan media referring to President George Bush as simply "George Bush" or "Mr. Bush", and The Bent One as "Former US President Bill Clinton".
16
posted on
09/22/2004 2:12:58 AM PDT
by
BigSkyFreeper
(Real gun control is - all shots inside the ten ring)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Also, women don't like pompous jerks any more than men do.
17
posted on
09/22/2004 2:21:48 AM PDT
by
stands2reason
(Limousine Liberal--a man who has his cake, eats his cake, and complains that other people have cake.)
To: leadpenny; All
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Shieffer believes
a. the country's headed in the wrong direction
b. the economy is bad
c. the war in iraq is going badly
How can TeamBush possibly want this member of the Inquisition as a moderator for a debate?
19
posted on
09/22/2004 2:25:15 AM PDT
by
xzins
(Retired Army and Proudly Supporting BUSH/CHENEY 2004!)
To: leadpenny
"Bob Schieffer is one of the good guys."Baloney. Schieffer is a liberal hack, just like the rest of the marxists at CBS.
20
posted on
09/22/2004 2:35:17 AM PDT
by
Godebert
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