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Politics : THE WHITE HOUSE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (22782)9/25/2008 11:28:28 AM
From: pompsander  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
"Go back and look at your last 50 or 100 posts. Tell us how many come from your left wing stance and how many are against your left wing homies."
__________-

Fiscal responsibility and common sense never go out of style. I have consistenly supported both. Tell me again, Pro, what a great job President Bush has done in leading us to economic strength over the past eight years with massive deficits, no cuts in spending and charging everything on the "national credit card".

At some point you gotta look at the facts....



To: PROLIFE who wrote (22782)9/25/2008 1:07:03 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Respond to of 25737
 
WSJ/NBC Poll: Voters Split on Bailout Plan

[Independents HATE it... while both Democrats and Republicans are nearly identical in their level of support. ALSO: the rich are FOR it, while the POOR are against it.]

Susan Davis reports on the bailout.
blogs.wsj.com

Voters are nearly evenly divided on the proposed $700 billion financial sector bailout working its way through Congress.

The latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll shows 31% of voters approve of the plan while slightly more, 33%, disapprove, and 28% said they had no opinion.

The poll also shows that wealthier voters support it by larger margins than lower income voters, with 48% of voters who earn $75,000 or more approving of the plan and just 12% of voters who earn less than $30,000 oppose the bailout.

Among self-identified Democratic voters, 33% approve, 30% disapprove, and 29% had no opinion. Republican voters largely mirrored those results as 32% approve, 31% disapprove, and 29% had no opinion.

Independent voters registered some of the highest levels of disapproval, with 45% opposing the plan, while 29% approved, and just 22%–the lowest of any subsection of voters—had no opinion.

The WSJ/NBC News poll will be released at 5:00 p.m/EDT today, check back at www.wsj.com for the full take.