Bush will be re-elected because the far-left wing of the democrat party will
see to it that their boy gets the nomination. This ape-stupid act gets
replayed over and over again and they are sure welcome to do it.
"--= Ö§âmâ ßíñ Këñ0ßí =--" <abuse@anarchy.gov> wrote in message
news:OBK942E75BC0BB7F0001138@r2-dv8.anarchy.gov...
This is pretty much how people felt during the 2000 election, nothing has
changed. So I guess Bu$h will lose again and still be elected, either by
Diebold or by some Republicon supreme court scum...
Poll: Majority of voters would not re-elect Bush
Yet president still has edge over main Democratic candidates
(CNN) --A poll released Saturday finds that more registered voters want to
see President Bush voted out than kept in office in the next election, but
his job approval rating has remained constant.
In the Newsweek poll, 50 percent of registered voters who were queried
said
they do not want to see Bush re-elected, while 44 percent said they do.
The survey of 1,002 adults interviewed Thursday and Friday has a margin of
error of plus-or-minus 3 percentage points.
The president's overall approval rating in the survey was 52 percent --
the
same it has been in previous polls by the magazine during the past two
months.
But in the wake of more deaths of U.S. soldiers in Iraq and the rising
price
tag for occupation and reconstruction, 51 percent of the respondents said
they disapprove of Bush's handling of Iraq -- the highest Newsweek's polls
have ever shown -- while 42 percent said they approve.
The survey suggests mixed feelings on the president's economic policies,
following positive news this week. Forty-four percent said they approve of
the way Bush is handling the economy -- up six points from the magazine's
previous poll a month ago. Forty-eight percent said they disapprove.
Among contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination, former
Vermont
Gov. Howard Dean edges out Gen. Wesley Clark in the poll. Sixteen percent
of
Democratic voters and those who lean Democratic said Dean would be their
first choice, while 15 percent said Clark would be.
Rep. ***** Gephardt was third with 9 percent; followed by Sen. Joseph
Lieberman at 8 percent; Sen. John Kerry and former Senator and Ambassador
Carol Moseley Braun at 7 percent; Sen. John Edwards at 6 percent; the Rev.
Al
Sharpton at 4 percent; and Rep. Dennis Kucinich at 2 percent.
Asked about possible matchups between Bush and Clark, Dean, Kerry,
Lieberman,
and Gephardt, respondents gave Bush a 4 or 5 percent lead in each case.
--
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