Voter Anger Might Mean an Electoral Shift in '06
Public Voices Dissatisfaction Over Iraq War, Economy
By Dan Balz, Shailagh Murray and Peter Slevin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, November 6, 2005; A01

One year before the 2006 midterm elections, Republicans are facing the most
adverse political conditions of the 11 years since they vaulted to power in
Congress in 1994. Powerful currents of voter unrest -- including unhappiness
over the war in Iraq and dissatisfaction with the leadership of President
Bush -- have undermined confidence in government and are stirring fears
among GOP candidates of a backlash.

Interviews with voters, politicians and strategists in four battleground
states, supplemented by a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, found
significant discontent with the performance of both political parties.
Frustration has not reached the level that existed before the 1994
earthquake, but many strategists say that if the public mood further
darkens, Republican majorities in the House and Senate could be at risk.

One bright spot for the Republicans is the low regard in which many
Americans hold the Democrats. The public sees the Democrats as disorganized,
lacking in clear ideas or a positive alternative to the GOP agenda, and
bereft of appealing leaders. In the Post-ABC News poll, voters gave
Washington low grades without favor: Just 35 percent said they approved of
the job Republicans in Congress were doing, while only 41 percent gave a
positive rating to the Democrats.

In shopping malls, town hall meetings and on front porches, Americans
expressed their concerns about the country's problems. The president still
has strong supporters, but more common are questions about his and the
country's priorities. A young mother in the Denver suburbs complained about
the state of public education. An Ohio retiree complained about energy
prices and said, "We're getting ripped off left and right by the oil
companies." Immigration appears to be a volatile issue far from the
U.S.-Mexico border. And looming over all else is the U.S. involvement in
Iraq, which continues to gnaw at the country's psyche.

[...]

Two-thirds of those surveyed by The Post and ABC News said the country is
heading in the wrong direction. Asked whom they were likely to support in
next year's House elections, 52 percent of registered voters said the
Democratic candidate, while 37 percent said the Republican.

[...]

Iraq a Key Concern

Pat Swensen, 61, stood on a chilly night with more than a dozen others at a
busy intersection in Coon Rapids, Minn., and held a candle in honor and
sorrow over the 2,000th American casualty in Iraq. Her niece's husband, an
Army soldier, is preparing for a third deployment to Iraq.

"What's so difficult is there is no plan," said Swensen, an assistant
registrar at a school in Ham Lake. "Nothing concrete that you can start
measuring and say, 'We've done this, we've done that, the troops can start
coming home.' How many times will my niece's husband have to go back?"

Swensen's question echoes across the country, among those who backed the war
from the beginning and among those who opposed it.

The Post-ABC poll found that 68 percent of Americans say the country is off
track, with only 30 percent saying things are going in the right direction.
Among those who offered a pessimistic assessment, 30 percent cited one of a
basket of economic issues: gas prices, jobs, incomes, inflation, the
deficit. This downbeat mood has so far been impervious to strong economic
news, including the recent announcement of a 3.8 percent annual growth rate
in the third quarter.

"The big concern is the economy," said Nancy Emerick, a Toledo, Ohio,
librarian. "There are still layoffs all the time in Toledo. [Auto parts
maker] Dana, one of our biggest employers, is cutting jobs. My husband lost
his job a couple years ago; he's working now, but he's not making what he
did."

The president's Supreme Court nominations, for all the intensity they
generate in Washington, do not appear to be significant issues with most
voters. Nor did the controversy over the CIA leak case, including the recent
indictment of Vice President Cheney's former chief of staff, I. Lewis
"Scooter" Libby, register significantly in voter interviews.

But anguish about Iraq comes through unmistakably in conversations at
shopping malls, coffee shops and on doorsteps around the country. In the
Post-ABC poll, 21 percent of those dissatisfied with the direction of the
country cited Iraq as the principal reason.

[...]

Negatives for Both Parties

Democrats see hopeful signs in an uneasy public mood. In the Post-ABC poll,
Americans prefer the opposition party to congressional Republicans on every
issue measured but one, including Iraq. The only exception was on terrorism;
there the two parties are tied.

But those strengths are offset by two glaring weaknesses. A majority of
Americans say the Democrats are not offering the country a clear direction
that is different from the Republicans, and on the question of which party
has stronger leaders, Republicans thump the Democrats by 51 percent to 35
percent.

"I just think they're sitting back waiting for something to happen," said
Diane Mashman, a retired high school teacher who lives in the Denver suburbs
and generally votes Democratic. "I don't know if they have anybody ready to
run for president. They need to get their act together."

Ask people to name attractive Democratic leaders and they hesitate, pause or
come up empty. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York enjoys clear support,
but even several who said positive things about her questioned whether she
could win the presidency, given the controversy that attaches to her history
and name.

Republicans have their own divisions to deal with, from ethics scandals in
Ohio to conflicts between conservatives and moderates. Prospective
Republican candidates fear they will be caught in the fallout next year.

Full:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/05/AR2005110501514_pf.html






Full:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/05/AR2005110501514_pf.html

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