POLIBLOG

POLLIWOG (Tadpole): the early stage of an animal that will eventually become a frog, hoping to be kissed by a princess, turning into a prince! POLIBLOG (Political Blog): the early stage of a center-right political blog that may eventually become a full blown blog of the center-right. Join in if you find any merit in the comments. If you are on the left and disagree, feel free to straighten me out! Who knows, with effort from all of us this blog may turn into a prince!

Name:
Location: San Diego, California, United States

Monday, May 23, 2005

IF YOU BELIEVE THIS, I HAVE A BRIDGE I'D LIKE TO SELL YOU!

daveweigel at KOS posts the results of a recent CNN/USAT/Gallup poll that shows that W and his administration are so far behind the Dem's in public approval on all policies that if you believe it 2006 is lost! And obviously 2004 was a fluke!

I'd love to see the demographics of this poll. Do you believe it? I think it is wishful thinking on the part of MSM and Gallup. We'll know in 18 months!

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Here is info on the demographic (or at least the count) of the survey.

Poll: Bush approval mark nears low
Congress receives poor marks too in latest Gallup poll
Monday, May 23, 2005 Posted: 11:29 PM EDT (0329 GMT)



President Bush's approval rating is down 4 percentage points since early May, according to a recent poll.


Question Mark-$16.65
Save big on over 250,000 book titles at clearance prices. Find all the latest...
www.overstock.com

Question Mark: In-Depth Company Info
Go to Hoover's Online for in-depth, first-hand, company coverage provided by...
www.hoovers.com



RELATED
• Interactive: Poll questions
• Poll: War now unpopular
• Bush pushes Social Security plan

QUICKVOTE
Which phrase do you think best describes Senate leaders?

Responsible adults
Spoiled children
VIEW RESULTS



YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS
George W. Bush

Senate

Justice and Rights

Judiciary (system of justice)

or Create your own

Manage alerts | What is this?


(CNN) -- President Bush's job approval rating dropped to near its lowest point and Congress received poor marks as well in a national poll released Monday.

Forty-six percent of 1,006 adults polled over the weekend said they approved of the overall job Bush is doing, according to a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll.

Over the past year, Bush's rating has hovered near 50 percent, with a low of 45 percent in March and a high of 57 percent just after his second inauguration and the State of the Union in February.

The 46 percent figure is down about 4 percentage points since a poll taken at the beginning of May.

The approval rating poll question, asked by telephone on May 20-May 22, had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Pollsters split some questions on specific issues between two "half groups" of respondents. Those questions had a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.

On domestic issues, the president's approval ratings are at an all-time low -- 40 percent of respondents approve of his work on the economy and 33 percent approve of his plans for Social Security changes.

Bush fared best among respondents when they were asked if they approved or disapproved how how he was handling terrorism.

But while 55 percent of the people taking part in the poll approved, that figure was down 2 percentage points from a poll taken in April.

On the Iraq war, the president's approval mark remained low -- just 40 percent of those agreed with the way he is handling the situation.

Most of those surveyed (52 percent) said they think Bush has "the personality and leadership qualities a president should have."

But many said they differ on the issues that matter most to them -- 57 percent disagreed with the president, while 40 percent said they agreed.

Congressional ratings
Both Democrats and Republicans in the Senate fared badly on the judicial nominees issue.

When asked to choose, 58 percent of respondents in the split part of the poll said Republican leaders were behaving like "spoiled children" on the matter while 31 percent picked "responsible adults."

Democratic leaders were viewed almost in the same light, with 54 percent of respondents disapproving and 36 percent approving.

On a separate question asked of half the respondents, 48 percent said they favored the Democrats in the dispute and 40 percent favored the GOP.

Several questions involving Congress were put to all respondents. Those questions had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

On the question of their interest in the filibuster issue, 37 percent said they had not been following it at all and 20 percent picked "not too closely."

All respondents were also asked whether they would change the filibuster and/or preserve it.

Thirty-five percent sided with changing Senate rules, 19 percent agreed on keeping the filibuster, and 34 percent wanted filibuster rules to remain intact but for nominees to receive a full Senate vote.

On the federal judiciary itself, 29 percent of all respondents said judges were too liberal, 19 percent said they were too conservative and 44 percent said they were "about right."

The poll also indicated Americans might want a change in Congress, with 47 percent of all respondents saying the country would be better off if Democrats were in control, compared with 36 percent who favored Republicans. Nine percent picked "neither."

Republicans control the Senate with 55 seats, Democrats have 44 seats and one senator lists himself as independent.

In the 435-member House of Representatives, Republicans hold 231 seats to the Democrats' 202. One member is an independent and there is one vacancy at the moment.

10:13 AM  
Blogger Jim said...

Anonymous,

Lot's of counts, but not really any info on the type of people. Democrat or Republican? High income, low income? Black, white, asian, latin? Self employed, work for others?

Depending on all these factors you can get whatever answere you want! I suspect this was taken among 1006 college professors!!!

3:00 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home