Turned a corner? Seems a little too late now...

Damon.
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Damon Agretto
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum."
http://www.geocities.com/garrand.geo/index.html
Now Building: Trumpeter's Marder I auf GW 38(h)
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Sent from my BlackBerry wireless handheld.  

-----Original Message-----
From: "Robert G. Seeberger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 17:02:05 
To:<[email protected]>
Subject: Pink Is the New Red

As President Bush's Popularity Falls, the Nation's Color Divide Adds a 
Few Hues


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/16/AR2006041600858_pf.html

http://tinyurl.com/l8roz


It seems that only yesterday American politics appeared to have found 
its true colors: Republican Red and Democratic Blue, the visual 
shorthand for an electorate that most thought had become immutably 
divided by geography and partisanship into red states and blue.

But political fashions quickly changed, and so have the colors of this 
year's political map.

States that were once reliably red are turning pink. Some are no 
longer red but a sort of powder blue. In fact, a solid majority of 
residents in states that President Bush carried in 2004 now disapprove 
of the job he is doing as president. Views of the GOP have also soured 
in those Republican red states.

According to the latest Post-ABC News poll, Bush's overall job 
approval rating now averages 43 percent in the states where he beat 
Democratic nominee John Kerry two years ago, while 57 percent 
disapprove of his performance.

Bush is even marginally unpopular, at least on average, in states 
where he beat Kerry with relative ease. The poll data suggest that in 
states where the president's victory margin was greater than five 
percentage points, his average job approval currently stands at 47 
percent. Red? Hardly. A watery pink at best.

And in states where the president's victory margin was five percentage 
points or less, a clear majority of residents now disapprove of his 
performance. Color them light blue.

More ominously for Republicans, their party also has lost standing 
with the public. Residents of states Bush won in 2004 say they trust 
the Democrats (48 percent) more than the Republicans (42 percent) to 
deal with the country's biggest problems.

Those humbling numbers for Republicans are a far cry from the results 
of surveys taken immediately before the 2004 election. Back then, red 
states were bright red: Bush's overall job approval rating stood 13 
points higher, at 56 percent in states that he eventually won. And 
throughout Bush's first term it was the GOP and not the Democrats whom 
voters in these states trusted to deal with the country's biggest 
problems, sometimes by double-digit margins.

Blue states are still blue -- but it is a deeper, bolder and angrier 
blue, the latest Post-ABC poll suggests. Across states where Kerry 
defeated Bush two years ago, barely a third -- 33 percent -- currently 
approve of the president's overall performance, while 65 percent 
disapprove. That's a 12-point drop in this group of states from a 
Post-ABC survey conducted before the presidential vote.

Taken together, these findings underscore the fact that Bush's fall 
from public grace isn't just occurring in states that were colored 
blue after the last presidential election. And they once again prove 
that change is inevitable in politics and that last year's received 
wisdom has a way of becoming this year's political myth.

To see if the political palette has changed, I divided the 1,027 
survey respondents in our latest poll into four groups on the basis of 
how their states voted in the 2004 presidential election. Those who 
lived in states where Bush won by more than five percentage points 
were aggregated together. So were those in states where Bush beat 
Kerry by a smaller margin. Residents of states that went for Kerry 
were split into two groups using the same five-percentage-point rule 
to differentiate big Kerry wins from more modest victories.

Of course some states are still dependably Republican. But even these 
are not quite as red as they were a few years ago. For example, Utah 
residents showered Bush with 72 percent of their votes in 2004, his 
biggest win that year. But the latest statewide poll by the Deseret 
Morning News/KSL-TV suggests that 61 percent approve of the job Bush 
is doing as president, a double-digit drop in approval since June. 
"Bush is dragging down every Republican officeholder in the nation, 
even here," pollster Dan Jones, a political science professor at the 
University of Utah, told the Morning News.

Other recent state polls confirm the broad findings of the aggregate 
analysis. In Iowa, Bush beat Kerry by a single percentage point -- 50 
percent to 49 percent -- and before the election, residents were 
equally divided over his overall job performance. Not so now: Bush's 
approval rating had sunk to 37 percent in a Des Moines Register poll 
conducted in January, his worst showing ever.

Closer to home, Bush easily carried Virginia, by eight percentage 
points, two years ago. But a Post survey two weeks before last 
November's gubernatorial election found that Bush's job approval 
rating among likely voters in the commonwealth had fallen to 44 
percent, while 55 percent disapproved of his performance.

That's one big reason Republican gubernatorial candidate Jerry Kilgore 
behaved so oddly toward Bush late in his campaign last year, first 
deciding to be conspicuously absent when the president came calling in 
Norfolk only to invite him to a big election-eve rally a week later. 
The president may expect similar ambivalence from GOP office-seekers 
in tight races as this year's campaign unfolds.



xponent

Turned Corner Maru

rob


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