http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/01/26/bush.poll/index.html

Poll: Most think Bush is failing second term
President 'looking forward' to congressional campaigning

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A majority of Americans are more likely to vote
for a candidate in November's congressional elections who opposes
President Bush, and 58 percent consider his second term a failure so
far, according to a poll released Thursday.

Fewer people consider Bush to be honest and trustworthy now than did a
year ago, and 53 percent said they believe his administration
deliberately misled the public about Iraq's purported weapons program
before the U.S. invasion in 2003, the CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll found.

Pollsters interviewed 1,006 American adults Friday through Sunday.
Most questions in the survey had a margin of sampling error of plus or
minus 3 percentage points. (Poll)

Bush is preparing for his State of the Union address, set for next
week, and told reporters Thursday that he is "looking forward" to
campaigning for Republicans in November's elections. (Full story)

But the latest poll indicated Americans remain in apessimistic mood.

Fifty-eight percent of those polled said Bush's second term has been a
failure so far, while 38 percent said they consider it a success. A
smaller number -- 52 percent -- consider his entire presidency a
failure to date, with 46 percent calling it successful. (Complete poll
results)

In the latter case, the numbers fall within those two questions'
margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.

Bush defended his performance Thursday, pointing to an improved
economy despite higher prices for gasoline, heating oil and natural
gas. He said the November elections would be about "peace and
prosperity."

"We've got a record, and a good one," he said. "That's what I intend
to campaign on and explain to people why I made the decisions I made,
and why they're necessary to protect the American people, and why
they've been necessary to keep this economy strong -- and why the
policies we've got will keep this economy strong in the future."

But 51 percent of those polled said they were more likely to vote for
a candidate in congressional elections who opposes Bush, while 40
percent said they were likely to vote for a candidate who backs the
president.

Bush's own approval rating remained at 43 percent, unchanged since
mid-December, according to results released earlier this week. Another
54 percent disapproved of his job performance, that survey found.

Nearly two-thirds of those surveyed in the latest poll -- 62 percent
-- said they were dissatisfied with the way things are going in the
United States, while 35 percent said they were satisfied.

And 64 percent said things in the United States have gotten worse in
the past five years, while 28 percent said things have improved.

For the first time since Bush took office in 2001, a majority of those
polled said the president -- who campaigned as "a uniter, not a
divider" -- has been a divisive leader. Fifty-four percent called Bush
a divider, while 41 percent called him a uniter.

Just over a third -- 34 percent -- said Bush had a clear plan for
solving the nation's problems, and 44 percent agreed that he cared
about the needs of people like them and shared their values.

A narrow majority of 51 percent said they consider Bush to be a strong
and decisive leader, compared with 48 percent who disagreed. Although
those totals fall within the margin of sampling error, they mark a
decline from a year ago, when 61 percent called the president strong
and decisive.
Split on honesty

Americans were divided evenly -- 49-49 -- on the question of Bush's honesty.

The number of those polled who consider Bush trustworthy improved from
a November survey, when only 46 percent rated him honest. But the
figure is down from a year ago, when 56 percent considered him honest
and trustworthy, and only 41 percent disapproved.

Specifically, 53 percent said they believe his administration
deliberately misled the public about whether Iraq had weapons of mass
destruction, as Bush and other top officials argued on the eve of the
March 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

Once Hussein was overthrown, U.S. inspectors concluded that Iraq had
not kept stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, long-range
missiles and a nuclear weapons program, though Iraq had concealed
weapons-related research from the United Nations.

U.S. troops are battling a persistent insurgency in Iraq, with two
soldiers killed in combat Wednesday, raising the American death toll
to 2,238. More than 2,000 of those have died since Bush declared an
end to "major combat operations" May 1, 2003.

The war in Iraq topped the list of respondents' concerns going into
2006, with 58 percent calling it extremely important. Terrorism was
next with 57 percent, followed by health care with 47 percent, the
economy at 46 percent and corruption at 45 percent.

Most of those polled said they believe the United States will have a
"significant number" of troops in Iraq for more than a year, with 47
percent believing the U.S. commitment will last one to three years and
33 percent believing the U.S. presence will last longer than that.

Thirty-four percent said they considered economic conditions good and
5 percent excellent, while 41 percent rated the economy fair and 18
percent poor.

Asked which way the economy was headed, 35 percent said they believed
it was improving; 54 percent said it was getting worse.

Economic growth has picked up in recent months, and unemployment has
declined since 2003. But gasoline prices remain well over $2 a gallon
on average, and natural gas and heating oil bills have gone up since
2005. (Full story)


Links referenced within this article

Poll
http://www.cnn.com/interactive/allpolitics/0601/poll.bush/frameset.exclude.html
Full story
http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/01/26/bush.ap/index.html
Complete poll results
http://i.cnn.net/cnn/interactive/allpolitics/0601/gallup.poll.pdf/rel3f.pdf
Full story
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/01/22/gas.prices/index.html


Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/01/26/bush.poll/index.html

--
Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment;
and he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices it to your
opinion.

Edmond Burke

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