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Voters Don't Want Bush Re-Elected - Poll
Voice of America ^ | 8/24/03

Posted on 08/24/2003 6:07:43 AM PDT by truthandlife

The majority of American voters would not like to see President Bush re-elected to another term according to a poll by Newsweek magazine.

The survey released Saturday showed that 49 percent of registered voters would not back the president for a second term if the vote were held now. Forty-four percent would support Mr. Bush's re-election.

The poll marked the first time in a Newsweek survey that supporters of Mr. Bush were out-numbered by those who would not like to see him back remain in office. In April, 52 percent of voters backed the president for a second term, while 38 percent did not.

The Newsweek report attributed the decline in the president's popularity to public disenchantment over the Iraq war. The poll found 69 percent of respondents said they were concerned that the United States will be bogged down for many years in Iraq without achieving its goals there.

Nearly half of those polled said they were concerned that the cost of the war will lead to a large budget deficit and seriously impact the U.S. economy. And more than half said they thought the estimated $1 billion per week the United States is paying for the war effort is too much and should be scaled back.

However, 61 percent still believe the United States was right to take military action against Iraq in March.

Only 18 percent of those polled believe a stable, democratic government can be set up in Iraq in the long term. And only 13 percent of respondents said U.S. efforts to establish security in Iraq and rebuild the country have gone well since May 1, when combat officially ended.

The Newsweek poll results are based on telephone interviews with more than one thousand adults aged 18 and older. It was conducted on August 21 and 22. The margin of error is plus or minus three percent.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bush; electionspresident; polls; reelection
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To: Cedric
Bingo, while I am not enamored with Bush, he is my man.
61 posted on 08/24/2003 7:28:44 AM PDT by L`enn
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To: truthandlife
if the current jobs trend continues, its going to be closer then I thought it would be. The best thing Bush has going for him is that Dem field are dopes, and have totally discredited themselves on the national security issue. But this trend to move US jobs offshore is very bad, its hitting the white collar private sector which the Rs need big majorities amongst, and Bush is doing nothing to address it. If Bush loses, its the fault of his economic team, either they are too stupid or too awash in corporate interests to dare speak out against this practice by US corporations.
62 posted on 08/24/2003 7:28:53 AM PDT by oceanview
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To: grania
Uhhhhhhh....isnt' a majority still something greater that 50%?

Yeppurs. The proper term here is "plurality", as in "Bill Clinton was elected twice to the White House with a plurality, and never won a majority." It's pretty pathetic that Newsweak can't even get the terminology correct.

63 posted on 08/24/2003 7:30:22 AM PDT by dirtboy (Arnold's positions are like the alien in Predator - you can't see them but you know they're lethal)
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To: truthandlife
The Newsweek report attributed the decline in the president's popularity to public disenchantment over the Iraq war.

Or maybe it's the fact that they used for their poll a list of likely Democrat voters.....????

64 posted on 08/24/2003 7:31:45 AM PDT by TheBattman
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To: truthandlife
Forty-four percent would vote for Bush, at this time in the 3rd year of his presidency.... He will win with these type of numbers as traditionally about 7-8% of the vote is for Snoopy and Ralph Nadar.... The Democrats at Newsweek are just trying to marshall their legions of welfare state losers.
65 posted on 08/24/2003 7:32:55 AM PDT by Jumper
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To: Graybeard58
>>>>>>>>>Am I living in a bubble here or what? <<<<<<<<<<<

Kind of....Look at it this way, despite your pension, everyone's portfolio has taken a giant hit since the market collapsed in March 2000, joblessness is up, raises are not great, everyone in the business world is chirping about how soft the economy is, only recently have economic indicators begun to show mild upticks and .....On top of all that, Alan Greenspan keeps trying to jump start the economy, or at least keep it from slipping back into stagnancy. So true or not in your eyes, Bush is at risk.

I am in the same situation as you are, but then I am not in manufacturing where outsourcing is very real and is taking away the middle class jobs that Bush needs to stay here so those folks (they are the ones who like it when we do the right thing , like going into Iraq) will vote for him. Bush's position right now is very precarious if you ask me. People at this site tend to look at things with a very jaundiced eye when it comes to polling. I am as right winged and conservative as they come, but if you eliminate all the chatter here and look at enough polling data, Bush is slipping....Newsweek, California has him below 50% since the Iraq war, Zogby.....forget about whether they are 100% correct, his numbers are slipping and that is what the consensus of all these polls reveals.

66 posted on 08/24/2003 7:35:46 AM PDT by irish guard
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To: truthandlife
On the issue of steel tariffs, suddenly Bush who was a free trader during his campaign is supporting steep steel tariffs, traditionally something Democrats might do. And he looks like a big spender in terms of agricultural subsidies. He signed a farm bill recently that really would put Bill Clinton to shame.

I agree with your points except this one. A steel manufacturing base is considered a military issue more than a commercial one.

67 posted on 08/24/2003 7:39:26 AM PDT by dfrussell
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To: truthandlife
Being honest, I am disgusted with his stand on Campaign Reform, Kennedy's Education bill, homosexual kowtowing, etc but President Bush is still 100% better than any dimocRat. I just cannot understand his refusal to clean up the Departments of Justice and State. They both are havens of leftists and continually cause him problems.
68 posted on 08/24/2003 7:39:58 AM PDT by zip
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To: Cedric
Go ahead. Chant the "Bush's performance gave us Perot" mantra long enough and maybe you can make yourself forget that you and well-meaning Perotistas like you gave us Clinton!

One thing that could have saved us from klintoon would have been a full investigation into Iran/Contra/Mena. Not much of a downside either. We would have avoided Bush1 and klintoon, and gone a long way towards cleaning up our government.

69 posted on 08/24/2003 7:41:16 AM PDT by steve50 (Faux News: Spinning like a pulsar)
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To: irish guard
Precisely. I think Bush's trouble is with the middle class, which is the group that so revered Reagan and helped him achieve those landslides. I think he has a residue of personal popularity out there, but I hear a growing unease ... even from conservatives ... about the economic situation because it's the middle class folks taking the hit.

And one of the biggest things, people are just foaming at the mouth about this, is the overtime rules change. I can make a conservative philosophical argument why that's the right thing to do. From a political and P.R. standpoint, I can't put into words how stupid I think that move is, especially a year before the election.

Now, I personally do not believe you can lay economic problems totally at the feet of the president of the U.S., whether it's Bush I and II, Clinton or Millard Fillmore, because I think business cycles are beyond human control. But rightly or wrongly, people think the guy in the Oval Office is the one responsible for making things right. Not Greenspan, not the Treasury Secretary, but the president. And I know things are turning around, but how fast are they going to turn around? Again, I realize it's not going to happen overnight, but I think this country has collective ADHD when it comes to patience.

70 posted on 08/24/2003 7:43:04 AM PDT by GB
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To: GB
You're kidding, right? How many people in the United States Of America are going oppose W's re-election based upon his change of the overtime rule? Two?
71 posted on 08/24/2003 7:46:44 AM PDT by Cedric
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To: truthandlife
Bush is down in the polls! You go girl! Your time has come!

"Patience patience my disciples! My time has come! I will rule! I can finally turn the USA into France."

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

1776 - 2005

 

THE SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF THE AMERICAS

2005-

The Rodham tax reduction plan.

72 posted on 08/24/2003 7:46:52 AM PDT by metalboy (Slinky, it makes a clickety sound and it goes downstairs, it is a marvelous spring)
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To: truthandlife
Yet another poll in which I wasn't asked.
73 posted on 08/24/2003 7:49:26 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: truthandlife
If there is any truth to this the reason is because he is losing his conservative base.To much time is being spent on foreign issues and not enough on domestic.It takes more than just tax cuts but a strengthening of our moral base and a return to constitutional beliefs.This cannot be done until drastic changes are made to our judicial system.
74 posted on 08/24/2003 7:50:01 AM PDT by INSENSITIVE GUY
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To: Cedric
No I'm not kidding. I guess we don't run in the same economic circles. This is a pocketbook issue for people, particularly in the middle class, and it is not going over well at all.

Check the archives here for threads on this ... I've participated in some, and you'll find that I'm not alone in my opinion even among Freepers.

But hey, I forgot. Everything is fine, everything is hunky dory, the Dems are in disarray and Bush is going to run the table next year, winning every state, this is just the liberal socialist media messing with our minds, move along, there's nothing to see here, break out the Kool-Aid.

75 posted on 08/24/2003 8:05:47 AM PDT by GB
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To: INSENSITIVE GUY
And drastic changes aren't going to be made to our judicial system unless we get a fillbuster-proof margin in the Senate. Which requires electing Republicans, even some who may be that in name only.
76 posted on 08/24/2003 8:08:04 AM PDT by GB
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To: GB
Okay, W is strong on Defense and the War On Terror and is perveived as a strong leader. And you're telling me he's in political danger because of some arcane overtime rule? Who ya gonna vote for, Howard Dean? He'll fix the overtime rule.
77 posted on 08/24/2003 8:16:57 AM PDT by Cedric
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To: truthandlife
Is the press now being just being bold face liers now???
I guess they play to their mindless base of liberal slaves..
78 posted on 08/24/2003 8:19:14 AM PDT by Porterville (If your liberal, you are evil, and you will go to hell)
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To: truthandlife
Thsi is such bs. Bush is doing the right thing. Bush is absolutely right. We have to stomp these terroists out. And the only other President to do the right thing was Reagan. I don't think the left realy understands that you can't let these monsters continue. If you are going to be a big power, maybe you should be like the Romans because that's all people respect in the end anaylsis anyway is power.

Keep Bush. He is the best one for the job. Clinton failed because he was to concerned about what everyone thought about him. Bush knows who he is and is staying his course. He is not afraid to make a decision. Clinton had to have polls tell him and then he was to busy playing with whatever.

I also think Bush is normal while Clinton is a bit of a sociopath(sp).
79 posted on 08/24/2003 8:24:13 AM PDT by freekitty
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To: freekitty
I also don't want to hear in the future the left say "oh, we're sorry, we were wrong".

This is too dangerous to screw up.
80 posted on 08/24/2003 8:25:54 AM PDT by freekitty
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