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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (33529)3/2/2009 8:02:29 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
HaHaHa!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Learn to read a CHART, (for criminney's sake!)

Message 25458975



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (33529)3/6/2009 12:47:42 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 71588
 
Putting Obama's Approval Ratings in Perspective - Peter Wehner, NRO
Thursday, March 05, 2009

Popularity Contests [Peter Wehner]

Here’s an interesting data point comparison: Barack Obama’s approval rating in the Gallup Poll today is 61 percent, with 28 percent disapproving (the Real Clear Politics aggregate of polls has his overall job approval rating at 59.8 percent). A March 5-7, 2001 Gallup poll found President Bush's job approval at 63 percent as well, with only 22 percent disapproving. So George W. Bush, at a comparable time in his presidency, was in marginally better shape than Barack Obama is right now, at least based on the Gallup Poll survey.

This runs counter to conventional wisdom that Obama is tremendously popular, and that Bush (based on the divisive nature of the 2000 election) was not. In fact, according to the Gallup Poll data, what President Bush did was rise in the esteem of the public during the first five weeks of his presidency, while Obama has lost a bit of altitude.

It’s worth adding that there was a lot of chatter yesterday about the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll which showed Barack Obama's numbers at an all-time high. But that was based on people’s “feelings toward” Obama (68 percent very or somewhat positive), rather than the more traditional job approval question (which showed Obama at 60 percent approval).

George W. Bush’s greatest moment in his presidency was still months off. We will see if Barack Obama, facing a crisis of a different kind, is able to meet the challenge before him. So far, with the market having plunged on his watch and lost trillions of dollars in the process, and still with no serious plan on how to deal with the banking system and toxic assets, the early signs are not encouraging. But it’s still very early. Life and politics, as we have all learned, has many surprises.

03/05 11:02 AM


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