Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Public Sees Bush as Less Trustworthy, Poll Shows

From The Associated Press:

WASHINGTON (July 19) - Americans have growing doubts about President Bush's honesty and his effectiveness, according to a poll taken at a time people are uneasy with the war in Iraq, uncertain about the economy and nervous about the terrorist threat.

Half of those in the poll taken by the Pew Research Center, 49 percent, said they believe the president is trustworthy, while almost as many, 46 percent said he is not. Bush was at 62 percent on this measure in a September 2003 Pew poll and at 56 percent in a Gallup poll in April.

One of Bush's strong suits throughout his presidency has been the perception by a majority of people that he is honest.

The slide in trust in Bush comes at a time the White House is answering questions about top aide Karl Rove's involvement in the public leak of the identity of a CIA operative.

"If the economy were doing better, the Iraq war wasn't as tenuous and people weren't as uneasy about terrorism, then they might be willing to cut Bush some slack on the Rove issue," said Robert Shapiro, who specializes in public opinion at Columbia University. "And it's all tied back to how the war was justified, so it raises all those issues as well."


When you start to see an major erosion of trust, this quickly, there is a serious problem within the Bush White House. The man sitting in the Oval Office is now out of touch with the American people. Let's face it. Every decision he has made, has caused this country to become more divided and partisan--even the Supreme Court nomination of a staunch conservative John Roberts to replace moderate Sandra Day O'Conner will continue to split this country. His economic policies seem to benefit the ubber-rich and big businesses, at the expense of ordinary workers. Environmental and energy policies are to let big business do as they please. The war in Iraq is to give the neocons their new American imperialism. And John Roberts will please the Religious Right as they tear Roe to shreds.

There is some other interesting news tid-bits here in the story. Consider the following:

Only half the public is closely following the allegations that Rove leaked the identity of a CIA operative, according to Pew. Democrats are predictably more inclined to say Rove should resign than Republicans.

But GOP support for Rove is lukewarm. About four in 10 Republicans said Rove shouldn't resign; about the same number said they were not sure.

Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew Research Center, said an analysis of the survey suggests the Rove controversy is contributing to the president's credibility problem. The belief that Rove has committed a serious offense is having an impact on Bush's ratings on believability, he said.


Only half the public is closely following the Rove scandal? I wonder which half? Here is another example of the partisan divide, where Democrats and liberals are closely watching this Rove scandal unfold, whereas conservatives are reiterating the same talking points from Fox News--which are regurgitate from the White House PR machine.

Only a fourth of people in an ABC News poll out this week said they believe the White House has been cooperating fully with the investigation of the CIA leak.

About half, 49 percent, in the Pew poll said they approve of the job being done by Bush on terrorism - as low as he's been on that issue since Sept. 11, 2001. Many independents have abandoned support for Bush in this area.

Bush's job approval in the Pew poll was 44 percent, with 48 percent disapproving.


This country is going down a wrong track. We are in a war we cannot win. We have an economy that is in shambles. We have a government, where the top officials believe they are above the law, and will do whatever they can to destroy the opposition. I seriously wonder if the American public will ever wake up before Bush and his neocon minions send this country over the cliff.

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