Posted on 03/15/2006 10:25:20 PM PST by jmc1969
In the aftermath of the Dubai ports deal, President Bush's approval rating has hit a new low and his image for honesty and effectiveness has been damaged. Yet the public uncharacteristically has good things to say about the role that Congress played in this high-profile controversy.
Most Americans (58%) believe Congress acted appropriately in strenuously opposing the deal, while just 24% say lawmakers made too much of the situation.
The new Pew survey underscores the public's alarm over the prospect that an Arab-owned company could have operated U.S. ports. There was broad opposition to the proposed deal from across the political spectrum, including two-to-one disapproval among conservative Republicans (56%-27%).
Bush's overall approval measure stands at 33%, the lowest rating of his presidency.
The president's ratings for handling of several specific issues, particularly terrorism, have also declined sharply. Just 42% now approve of Bush's job in handling terrorist threats, an 11-point drop since February. In January 2005, as Bush was starting his second term, 62% approved of his handling of terrorist threats.
Bush's personal image also has weakened noticeably, which is reflected in people's one-word descriptions of the president. Honesty had been the single trait most closely associated with Bush, but in the current survey "incompetent" is the descriptor used most frequently.
Congress has drawn bipartisan praise from the American public for its response to the possible transfer of U.S. port operations to a United Arab Emirates company. Nearly two-thirds of Democrats (68%), and roughly half each of independents (53%) and Republicans (49%) said Congress acted appropriately, though a third of Republicans felt too much was made of the issue.
(Excerpt) Read more at people-press.org ...
In Massachusetts, independent voters outnumber both Democrats and Republicans. In Ohio, something like 60% of voters are not affiliated with a party.
Independent doesn't mean voting Green or Reform, it means that you don't identify with one of the two major parties but will likely vote for one of the most of the time.
If the democrats want to run on a "Impeach Bush Elect Democrats" platform in '06 have at it.
Thank you for the correction.
I appreciate you doing that legwork. I was just WAY too tired last night to go looking.
Thanks again and I'm sorry that I remembered it differently. That's what I get for just "popping off" at the mouth. Or in this case, the fingers. ; D.
Again...
you can't just fudge numbers for likely voters vs. adults, because it's not an electoral poll. Non-voters are allowed to have an opinion on the President's job performance. This is NOT a poll about who will win the next election. It's a poll about Americans' opinion of the President's job performance.
As to the biased questions, I don't see much bias in "How do you rate the President's job performance?"
Thanks.
Rasmussen had the final numbers almost exactly.
I was responding to the oft-repeated claim here that polls are usually wrong, and then they point to 2004 as an example.
In fact, most polls in 2004 showed the President slightly ahead of John Kerry. Further, electoral polls are a bit different, because a national poll is meaningless - you have to do a state-by-state analysis to figure out who's likely to win.
My point is that everybody screams that polls are usually way off. They are not. Occasionally, an outlier will appear, but polling is serious business, and the companies work hard to get it right. After all, it's their bread and butter - they compete on the basis of who best accurately reflect public opinion.
People here think that some liberal bias exists in all polling companies that compel them to compromise their business interests for the sake of making the President's approval look 3% worse than it actually is. I think that's absurd.
They called him a liar, said the war was waged for political purposes, on and on and on. What a disgrace.
Cyber- how old is the Battleground poll? Is that from Feb? If so, it's pretty irrelevant.
That's what I keep telling folks here, and it falls on deaf ears! The oversampling of Dems, even by 10%, will take 3, maybe 4 points away from Bush's approval ratings, big deal.
No matter how you slice it, the figures are absolutely pathetic!
Agreed!
I was around FR during the impeachment, when we all hypnotoized each other that the country was livid at Clinton, wanted him sorry arse out of office, and that the polls (which showed support for Clinton) were all wrong.
The polls leading up to the 2000 election showed a close race, giving Bush a slight edge. On election day, Nader's support collapsed and made it closer than expected. The polls were right.
The polls leading up to the 2004 election showed a close race, givin Bush a few point edge. The polls were right.
I have no idea why Freepers insist that the pre-election polls were wrong. The exit polls on election day initially gave poor results, but they were refined as the day went on.
Polls are meaningful.
If Bush's polling numbers don't improve over the next few months, it could be a very difficult night for the GOP on election day. Leading up to it, Bush will be ridiculed by the libs in ad after ad, and the GOPers who will be running from Bush will be tied to him in all of these ads, usually in the most non-flattering way...
I used to get BLASTED by some FReepers for getting irate that Bush and Cheney/Frist/Hastert didn't fight back at these outrageous charges. As the old phrase goes... if a lie is repeated often enough, ESPECIALLY IF IT DOESN'T EVEN GET CHALLENGED, it will be believed as fact by many...
It was a disgraceful thing to all for years, and now we're seeing the fruits of the libs' lies.
Is there anyone out there that STILL thinks turning the other cheek at all times was the right move? Come on now.
David Frum made a similar point a year ago (before things really headed south with his approval). I think you are right and I don't understand why that problem can't be solved.
You saw what happened in Iraq today. You'll be seeing a lot more in the weeks and months to come. Bush will get a 10 point bounce from this attack today. They hit one of the big AQ hornet's nest today.
Nope.
Yep
Bush doesnt care what his approval rating is.
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