Bush poll ratings at record low
In 19 months, George W. Bush will leave the White House for the last time.
The latest Newsweek poll suggests that he faces a steep climb if he hopes to coax the country back to his side before he goes.
In the new poll, conducted on Monday and Tuesday nights, the President’s approval rating has reached a record low.
President Bush, who has tried to introduce a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, is lower than Jimmy Carter, who sunk to his nadir of 28 percent in a Gallup poll in June 1979.
Only 26 percent of Americans, just over one in four, approve of the job the 43rd president is doing; while, a record 65 percent disapprove, including nearly a third of Republicans.
In fact, the only president in the last 35 years to score lower than Bush is Richard Nixon.
Nixon’s approval rating tumbled to 23 percent in January 1974, seven months before his resignation over the botched Watergate break-in.
The war in Iraq continues to drag Bush down.
A record 73 percent of Americans disapprove of the job Bush has done handling Iraq.
Despite “the surge” in U.S. forces into Baghdad and Iraq’s western Anbar province, a record-low 23 percent of Americans approve of the president’s actions in Iraq, down 5 points since the end of March.
But the White House cannot pin his rating on the war alone. Bush scores record or near record lows on every major issue: from the economy (34 percent approve, 60 percent disapprove) to health care (28 percent approve, 61 percent disapprove) to immigration (23 percent approve, 63 percent disapprove).
And-in the worst news, perhaps, for the crowded field of Republicans hoping to succeed Bush in 2008, 50 percent of Americans disapprove of the president’s handling of terrorism and homeland security.
Only 43 percent approve, on an issue that has been the GOP’s trump card in national elections since 9/11.
If there is any good news for Bush and the Republicans in the latest Newsweek poll, it’s that the Democratic-led Congress fares even worse than the president.
Only 25 percent of Americans approve of the job Congress is doing.
In the scariest news for the Democratic candidates seeking their party’s nomination in 2008, even rank-and-file Democrats are unhappy with Congress, which is narrowly controlled by their party.
Only 27 percent of Democrats approve of the job Congress is doing, a statistically insignificant difference from the 25 percent of Republicans and 25 percent of independents who approve of Congress.
Overall, 63 percent of Americans disapprove of the job Congress is doing, including 60 percent of Democrats, 67 percent of Republicans and 64 percent of Independents.
Apparently, voters aren’t happy with anyone in Washington these days.
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