SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wayners who wrote (462196)9/20/2003 10:14:39 PM
From: Orcastraiter  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Like throwing gasoline on a bonfire?

Social Security can be saved, but it may take deficits and sacrificing in other areas of the budget. Hopefully the peace dividend will get here before the day of reckoning.

Orca



To: Wayners who wrote (462196)9/20/2003 10:14:52 PM
From: laura_bush  Respond to of 769667
 
What the $87 Billion Speech Cost Bush
By Mike Allen
Washington Post

Saturday 20 September 2003

Polls May Indicate That TV Address Eroded President's
Support on Iraq

President Bush has often used major speeches to bolster his standing
with the public, but pollsters and political analysts have concluded that his
recent prime-time address on Iraq may have had the opposite effect --
crystallizing doubts about his postwar plans and fueling worries about the
cost.

A parade of polls taken since the Sept. 7 speech has found notable
erosion in public approval for Bush's handling of Iraq, with a minority of
Americans supporting the $87 billion budget for reconstruction and the war
on terrorism that he unveiled.

"If Bush and his advisers had been looking to this speech to rally
American support for the president and for the war in Iraq, it failed," said
Frank Newport, editor in chief of the Gallup poll. He said Bush's speech
may have cost him more support than it gained, "because it reminded the
public both of the problems in Iraq and the cost."

Since the speech from the Cabinet Room, headlines on poll after poll
have proved unnerving for many Republicans and encouraging for
Democrats. "Bush Iraq Rating at New Low," said a CBS News poll taken
Sept. 15 and Sept. 16. "Americans Split on Bush Request for $87 Billion,"
said a Fox News poll taken Sept. 9 and Sept. 10. A Gallup poll taken Sept
8 to 10 pointed to "increasingly negative perceptions about the situation in
Iraq" and found the balance between Bush's approval and disapproval ratings
to be "the most negative of the administration."

A Washington Post-ABC News poll taken from Sept. 10 to Sept. 13
found that 55 percent of those surveyed said the Bush administration does
not have a clear plan for the situation in Iraq, and 85 percent said they were
concerned the United States will get bogged down in a long and costly
peacekeeping mission.

Those results were disappointing to supporters who had watched Bush
galvanize public opinion with his speech on Iraq at the United Nations on
Sept. 12, 2002, stanching accounts of drift and infighting in his
administration. Other addresses that gave Bush a lift included his address
to Congress nine days after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and his speech
to the nation two nights before the Iraq war began last March.

Bush acknowledged this week that he was having trouble getting his
message out. He told a roundtable of reporters from the Oregonian of
Portland and other newspapers in swing states that he needs "to continue
to explain to the American people why it's important we succeed in Iraq."

"I know we've got a construction plan, and we'll continue to explain it,"
Bush said. "Sometimes it's hard to get through the filter. That's why I gave
the address from this room next door the other night, so I could explain
directly to the American people what's important. And I will continue to
make the case."

Bush, whose aides say he eschews the nitty-gritty of politics, quibbled
with the wording in one poll when he was asked about two polls that showed
a majority of Americans opposed his $87 billion request to Congress. "If you
look at the question, it's kind of a strange question," he said, in what
sources called a reference to a question that told respondents how much
spending Congress had already approved.

Senior officials at Bush's campaign said the declines in polls were no
cause for alarm because they were not driven by the speech but instead
were part of a natural decline from historic levels that Bush aides have long
predicted.

A campaign official also pointed to a question in the Post-ABC News poll
that showed the percentage of respondents who thought the war with Iraq
was worth fighting had risen from 54 percent in a poll ending the day of the
speech to 61 percent afterward.

White House officials point out that the address had a smaller audience
than some other presidential speeches. Nielsen Media Research said the
Sept. 7 address was seen by about 31.7 million viewers, compared with 62
million for this year's State of the Union address, 55.8 million for his news
conference on March 6 and 73.3 million for his ultimatum to Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein.

"We didn't put all our hopes into one speech," White House
communications director Dan Bartlett said. "This is going to be a sustained
commitment by the administration and the president to educate the public
about the stakes in the war and why we are committed to prevailing."

A wide range of Republicans close to the White House said they do not
blame the speech for Bush's poll problems, and said they are not panicked
about how he will fare in the 2004 election. "The speech had limited
objectives," one official said. "The wolves were out, and the speech sucked
some of the wind out of that."

But there was widespread agreement among these Republicans that the
speech did little if anything to help steady his standing, which had been hurt
by a stream of bad news from Iraq and disclosures about the
administration's handling of prewar intelligence.

Several of these Republicans complained about the decision to have
Bush stand and read from a TelePrompTer instead of showing him seated
and speaking more conversationally.

"Can you find anybody on Capitol Hill who thinks, 'Boy, that really gave
us momentum?' " one presidential adviser asked. "The setting was a failure.
The linguistics were bad. The language was off. It wasn't typical Bush
language, and he should have been in front of a group. He isn't at his best
discussing the appropriations process."

George C. Edwards III, a Texas A&M political scientist whose book, "On
Deaf Ears: The Limits of the Bully Pulpit," is being published this month,
said he studied presidential speeches back to 1981 and found that they
rarely produce a statistically significant change in approval ratings. But
Edwards said Bush may have hurt his credibility by not acknowledging "that
we didn't have a very good plan, and that we've had more setbacks than we
anticipated."

"Facing up to that, and then saying we really need to be persistent,
would have been more credible, given all the things that are going on and
that people are aware of," Edwards said.

washingtonpost.com