-Caveat Lector-

Bush approval rating in free fall

http://news.mysanantonio.com/story.cfm?xla=saen&xlb=190&xlc=925290&xld=1
90

By Stewart M. Powell
Hearst Washington Bureau

Web Posted : 01/19/2003 12:00 AM

WASHINGTON � Anxiety about the economy and a threatened war in Iraq lie
behind President Bush's 29 percent plunge in job approval in 16 months,
observers say.

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The Gallup poll released Friday echoed other recent polls
showing Bush's historically high 90 percent approval rating after the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks has declined to 61 percent.

A Gallup survey from earlier last week showed Bush getting a 58 percent
approval rating � the lowest since before 9-11.

"If the economy wasn't so bad, the decline would have been more gradual,"
Gallup's Jeffrey Jones says.

The slippage recalls that suffered by President George Bush after the 1991
Persian Gulf War. Bush, father of the president, enjoyed an 89 percent approval
rating the week after a U.S.-led coalition evicted Iraqi occupation forces from
Kuwait in a stunning four-day ground war.

But 16 months later, the elder Bush's approval ratings had plummeted to 32
percent, setting the stage for his defeat in 1992.

"Everybody is watching to see if Bush goes the way of his father � from 90
percent to toast in barely a year," said William Schneider, a political scientist at
the American Enterprise Institute. "Right now I'd call this drop a decline � not
yet a collapse."

Fifty-five percent of those surveyed by Gallup said Bush was not spending
enough time on the economy, which remains afflicted with the worst
unemployment in almost nine years, a three-year stock market decline that has
cost stockholders almost $6 trillion, and economic growth of barely 1.5 percent
over the last seven quarters.

Only 36 percent of respondents said they would "definitely vote" for Bush in
2004.

"Bush is suffering a rapid decline, just like his father," says James Thurber, a
presidential scholar at American University. "With high unemployment, a low
stock market hitting the middle class, a controversial economic stimulus
package and anxiety about the war in Iraq � no wonder his approval rating has
dropped."

Bruce Buchanan, a presidential scholar at the University of Texas at Austin,
says Americans are taking a second look at controversies over Bush's domestic
proposals, now that fears of terrorist attacks have diminished.

Bush's job approval ratings have continued to slip since the historic GOP gains
in the House and Senate in the midterm congressional election in November.

Buchanan cited Bush's economic stimulus package and his resubmission of
controversial judicial nominations to the Senate. He also said Bush and the GOP
suffered because of the controversy over remarks by Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss.,
endorsing the 1948 Dixiecrat segregationist presidential campaign of retiring
Sen. Storm Thurmond, R-S.C.

Bush helped orchestrate Lott's resignation as incoming Senate majority leader.

Only 12 percent in the Gallup survey said Bush's plan would make a big
difference in their family finances.

Bush's popularity also suffers because of uncertainty over Iraq. The percentage
of Americans who consider Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein a threat has slipped
from 65 percent to 56 percent, according to the latest Gallup survey.

Support for an attack on Iraq remains highly conditional, according to a survey
by Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

Seventy-six percent of respondents said they favored using military force if U.N.
inspectors found Iraq hiding weapons of mass destruction. But only 46 percent
want force if inspectors find Iraq hiding "the ability to easily make weapons."

Iraq's failure to prove the absence of weapons of mass destruction � the
cornerstone of Bush's demands � warranted the use of force for only 29
percent of those asked.

Antiwar sentiments have started to surface, as well. The Pew survey found 53
percent of respondents believed Bush had not clearly explained the rationale for
using U.S. military forces to oust Saddam � up from 37 percent who expressed
that sentiment in September.

In a Newsweek poll released Saturday, 60 percent said they would prefer the
Bush administration allow more time to find an alternative to war, according to
the Associated Press.

Support for a military option would be strong, 81 percent, if the United States
were to act with full allied support and the backing of the U.N. Security Council.
A majority would be opposed should this country act without the support of the
United Nations and had no more than one or two allies.

The president's job approval was at 56 percent in the Newsweek poll and 53
percent in a CNN- Time poll released over the weekend. His approval rate was
in the 60s in both polls in November.

According to the CNN-Time poll, the decline comes as a result of slightly higher
disapproval among Republicans, independents and Democrats.

Half in the CNN-Time poll, 50 percent, said they approve Bush's handling of
foreign policy, while 42 percent disapprove. In July, before the administration
began its public campaign about Iraq, 64 percent approved his handling of
foreign policy.

People worry about the impact of the United States' taking military action against
Iraq.

More than half in the Newsweek poll, 54 percent, said they expect it would
cause serious divisions with allies. And more than two-thirds thought it would
cause serious problems throughout the Arab countries and would cause
Saddam to use biological or chemical weapons against Israel.

The experts said Bush can look for "a blip" in his popularity after the nationally
televised State of the Union address on Jan. 28.

Jones and Schneider agreed that the approval rating of 61 percent recorded
Friday showed Bush remains a force to be reckoned with in 2004.

"If his father had 61 percent approval, there would not have been a President
Clinton," Schneider said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

01/19/2003

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