The disfavor for Bush registered by polls is surpassed only by the 
disfavor for the majority-controlled Congress whose poll numbers are 
even worse than Bush's...

Funny, that.


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Robert Gimbel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Disfavor for Bush Hits Rare Heights
> 
> In Modern Era, Only Nixon and Truman Scored Worse, Just Barely
> By Peter Baker
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Wednesday, July 25, 2007; A03
> 
> President Bush is a competitive guy. But this is one contest he 
would rather lose. With 18 months left in office, he is in the 
running for most unpopular president in the history of modern polling.
> The latest Washington Post-ABC News survey shows that 65 percent of 
Americans disapprove of Bush's job performance, matching his all-time 
low.
> In polls conducted by The Post or Gallup going back to 1938, only 
twice has a president exceeded that level of public animosity -- 
Harry S. Truman, who hit 67 percent during the Korean War, and 
Richard M. Nixon, who hit 66 percent four days before resigning.
> The historic depth of Bush's public standing has whipsawed his 
White House, sapped his clout, drained his advisers, encouraged his 
enemies and jeopardized his legacy. Around the White House, aides 
make gallows-humor jokes about how they can alienate their remaining 
supporters -- at least those aides not heading for the door. Outside 
the White House, many former aides privately express anger and 
bitterness at their erstwhile colleagues, Bush and the fate of his 
presidency.
> Bush has been so down for so long that some advisers maintain it no 
longer bothers them much. It can even, they say, be liberating. 
Seeking the best interpretation for the president's predicament, they 
argue that Bush can do what he thinks is right without regard to 
political cost, pointing to decisions to send more U.S. troops to 
Iraq and to commute the sentence of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice 
President Cheney's former chief of staff.
> But the president's unpopularity has left the White House to play 
mostly defense for the remainder of his term. With his immigration 
overhaul proposal dead, Bush's principal legislative hopes are to 
save his No Child Left Behind education program and to fend off 
attempts to force him to change course in Iraq. The emerging strategy 
is to play off a Congress that is also deeply unpopular and to look 
strong by vetoing spending bills.
> The president's low public standing has paralleled the 
disenchantment with the Iraq war, but some analysts said it goes 
beyond that, reflecting a broader unease with Bush's policies in a 
variety of areas. "It isn't just the Iraq war," said Shirley Anne 
Warshaw, a presidential scholar at Gettysburg College. "It's 
everything."
> Some analysts believe that even many war supporters deserted him 
because of his plan to open the door to legal status for illegal 
immigrants. "You can do an unpopular war or you can do an unpopular 
immigration policy," said David Frum, a former Bush 
speechwriter. "Not both."
> Yet Bush's political troubles seem to go beyond particular 
policies. Many presidents over the past 70 years have faced greater 
or more immediate crises without falling as far in the public mind -- 
Vietnam claimed far more American lives than Iraq, the Iranian 
hostage crisis made the United States look impotent, race riots and 
desegregation tore the country apart, the oil embargo forced drivers 
to wait for hours to fill up, the Soviets seemed to threaten the 
nation's survival.
> "It's astonishing," said Pat Caddell, who was President Jimmy 
Carter's pollster. "It's hard to look at the situation today and say 
the country is absolutely 15 miles down in the hole. The economy's 
not that bad -- for some people it is, but not overall. Iraq is 
terribly handled, but it's not Vietnam; we're not losing 250 people a 
week. . . . We don't have that immediate crisis, yet the anxiety 
about the future is palpable. And the feeling about him is he's 
irrelevant to that. I think they've basically given up on him."
> That may stem in part from the changing nature of society. When 
Caddell's boss was president, there were three major broadcast 
networks. Today cable news, talk radio and the Internet have made 
information far more available, while providing easy outlets for rage 
and polarization. Public disapproval of Bush is not only broad but 
deep; 52 percent of Americans "strongly" disapprove of his 
performance and 28 percent describe themselves as "angry."
> "A lot of the commentary that comes out of the Internet world is 
very harsh," said Frank J. Donatelli, White House political director 
for Ronald Reagan. "That has a tendency to reinforce people's 
opinions and harden people's opinions."
> Carter and  Reagan at their worst moments did not face  a public as 
hostile as the one confronting Bush. Lyndon B. Johnson at the height 
of Vietnam had the disapproval of 52 percent of the public. Franklin 
D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Gerald R. 
Ford never had  disapproval ratings reach 50 percent.
> Truman and Nixon remain the most unpopular modern presidents, 
though barely. Truman's disapproval rating reached 67 percent in 
January 1952 and matched Bush's 65 percent a month later. Nixon 
reached 66 percent on Aug. 5, 1974, four days before he resigned amid 
Watergate. George H.W. Bush came close before losing his bid for 
reelection in 1992, with 64 percent disapproval.
> The current president, though, has endured bad numbers longer than 
Nixon or his father did and longer than anyone other than Truman. His 
disapproval rating has topped 50 percent for more than two years. And 
although Truman hit 67 percent and 65 percent once each within a 
month-long period, Bush has hit his high three times in the past 14 
months.
> Bush advisers clutch at Truman as if he were a political life 
preserver. If Bush has experienced a similar collapse in public 
support while in office, they hope he will enjoy the same post-
presidential reassessment that has made Truman look far better today 
than in his time. A 2004 poll by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner found that 
58 percent of Americans viewed Truman favorably.
> And the president's team takes solace in the fact that the public 
holds Congress in low esteem, too. More than half disapproved of 
Congress generally, and Democrats in particular, in the latest Post-
ABC survey, though their ratings were still better than Bush's.
> The deep antipathy to Bush has fueled grass-roots support for 
impeachment. Democrats have resolved not to do that, remembering the 
division when a Republican Congress impeached Bill Clinton in 1998 
for perjury and obstruction of justice to cover up his affair with 
Monica S. Lewinsky. His public support, though, never fell as far as 
Bush's. Clinton's worst disapproval rating, 51 percent, came during 
his first term, and he soared to his highest approval rating days 
after the Lewinsky scandal broke.
> As much as Bush advisers dismiss polls, their predecessors in the 
White House said public rejection invariably drags down the whole 
institution. "It colors everything you can do," Donatelli 
said. "Psychologically, it wears on you."
> Caddell describes a White House down in the polls in one 
word: "Awful." "People start going through the motions," he 
added. "The energy is gone."
> Assistant polling director Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this 
report.
> 
>        
> ---------------------------------
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