Posted on 01/26/2010 10:20:07 AM PST by NormsRevenge
As Barack Obama begins his second year in office, the publics priorities for the president and Congress remain much as they were one year ago. Strengthening the nations economy and improving the job situation continue to top the list. And, in the wake of the failed Christmas Day terrorist attack on a Detroit-bound airliner, defending the country from future terrorist attacks also remains a top priority.
At the same time, the public has shifted the emphasis it assigns to two major policy issues: dealing with the nations energy problem and reducing the budget deficit. About half (49%) say that dealing with the nations energy problem should be a top priority, down from 60% a year ago. At the same time, there has been a modest rise in the percentage saying that reducing the budget deficit should be a top priority, from 53% to 60%.
Other policy priorities show little change from a year ago. For example, despite the ongoing debate over health care reform, about as many now call reducing health care costs a top priority (57%) as did so in early 2009 (59%). In fact, the percentage rating health care costs a top priority is lower now than it was in both 2008 (69%) and 2007 (68%).
In addition, the percentage placing top priority on providing health insurance to the uninsured stands at 49%. That is little changed from a year ago and off its high of 61% in January 2001. Notably, there is now a wider partisan gap in opinion about this issue than for any of the other 20 issues in the survey: fully 75% of Democrats rate providing health insurance to the uninsured as a top priority compared with just 26% of Republicans.
(Excerpt) Read more at people-press.org ...
Global Warming and the Environment
Dealing with global warming ranks at the bottom of the publics list of priorities; just 28% consider this a top priority, the lowest measure for any issue tested in the survey. Since 2007, when the item was first included on the priorities list, dealing with global warming has consistently ranked at or near the bottom. Even so, the percentage that now says addressing global warming should be a top priority has fallen 10 points from 2007, when 38% considered it a top priority. Such a low ranking is driven in part by indifference among Republicans: just 11% consider global warming a top priority, compared with 43% of Democrats and 25% of independents.
Protecting the environment fares somewhat better than dealing with global warming on the publics list of priorities, though it still falls on the lower half of the list overall. Some 44% say that protecting the environment should be a top priority for Obama and Congress, little changed from 2009.
The sad thing is that people actually STILL believe in TROGW/CC. (The Religion of GW/CC)
Top priorities? How about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? If the government would stick to protecting those, prosperity and economic growth would follow.
Sorry, but what are you talking about?
Sorry! I was referring to GW/CC being dead last on the list of priorities.
Thanks!
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