NY Times, July 17, 2004
No Poll Boost From Edwards
By RICHARD W. STEVENSON and JANET ELDER

WASHINGTON, July 16 - Senator John Edwards is viewed far more favorably
than unfavorably by Americans in the aftermath of his introduction as
Senator John Kerry's running mate, and the intensity of feeling for Mr.
Kerry has deepened, among his backers in the presidential race,
according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

But naming Mr. Edwards did not immediately win over any substantial
number of voters for the Democratic ticket, and the campaign between Mr.
Kerry and President Bush remains statistically deadlocked as Mr. Kerry
heads toward the Democratic convention and his best opportunity to make
a strong impression on the country, the poll found.

The poll also found that Mr. Bush's approval ratings were at low levels
for an incumbent at this point in a presidential campaign and that for
the first time a majority of Americans feel the United States should
have stayed out of Iraq.

The results suggested that the country is as deeply divided as ever,
leaving both sides struggling to alter the campaign's basic story line,
in which Mr. Bush is showing clear vulnerabilities but Mr. Kerry has
been unable to exploit them.

Mr. Kerry's greatest opportunity appears to remain Mr. Bush's handling
of Iraq. FIFTY-ONE percent of respondents said the United States should
have stayed out of Iraq, up from 46 percent in April, May and June.
Forty-five percent said taking military action in Iraq was the right
thing to do, down slightly from the past several months.

SIXTY-TWO percent said the war was not worth the loss of American lives
and other costs, a figure that has risen steadily over the past few months.

full: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/17/politics/campaign/17poll.html

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