Friday, July 13, 2007

Opposition to Iraq war Reaches Record Highs

Written by Susan Page
Tuesday, 10 July 2007

More than 70% of Americans Want US Out By April 2008

Opposition to the Iraq war has reached a record high, a USA TODAY/Gallup

Poll finds, a development likely to complicate President Bush's efforts to hold

together Republican support as the Senate begins debate this week on
Pentagon priorities.


Bush's approval rating has reached a new low: 29%.


In the survey, taken Friday through Sunday, one in five Americans say the

increase in U.S. forces in Iraq since January has made the situation there better.

Half say it hasn't made a difference.

More than seven in 10 favor removing nearly all U.S. troops from Iraq by April.

Still, 55% say Congress should wait to develop a new policy on Iraq until Gen.

David Petraeus, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, delivers a promised assessment

in September; 40% say Congress should act now.

The White House is scrambling to prevent more defections among Republicans in

the debate over the defense authorization bill, a platform for amendments on the war.

Such senior GOP senators as Richard Lugar of Indiana and Pete Domenici of

New Mexico in recent days have called on Bush to change course in Iraq.

"It makes it much harder for him to hold any Republican in the House or Senate,"

says Dean Lacy of Dartmouth College, who studies public opinion. "They have to

run for re-election. They realize now that Bush can't help them at all; he may hurt them."

White House spokesman Tony Fratto declined to discuss the findings. "We really don't

pay much attention to polls," he says. "I know they're fun, self-generating news hooks,

but we don't make policy decisions based on which way the wind is blowing."

Bush's support is eroding among Republicans: 68% approve of him, down from an

average 92% in his first term, 82% in his second. Nearly 4 in 10 Republicans say the

immigration debate, which ended in defeat for Bush's overhaul proposal, caused them

to lose confidence in him.

The poll of 1,014 adults has an error margin of +/—3 percentage points for the full sample,

5 points for the GOP subsample.

The results reflect broad dissatisfaction with Bush and the country's direction:

•Sixty-two percent say the United States made a mistake in sending troops to Iraq,

the first time that number has topped 60%.

•Two-thirds say Bush shouldn't have intervened in the case of former White House aide

Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who was sentenced to 2½ years in prison for perjury and

obstruction of justice in the investigation of who leaked a CIA operative's identity.

Bush voided Libby's prison sentence but let his conviction stand.

•Six in 10 say the economy is worse than it was five years ago, and the same number

predict that economic conditions are getting worse.

Bush now has had both the highest approval rating in Gallup's history —

90% in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks — and one of the lowest.

Among modern presidents, only Richard Nixon, Harry Truman and

Jimmy Carter ever had a lower rating.

By 62%-36%, those surveyed say an impeachment inquiry against Bush,
promoted by some liberal websites including ImpeachBush.com, wouldn't
be justified. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says Congress has no intention
of holding such proceedings. Republicans oppose the idea 91%-9%.
Democrats support it 54%-44%.

Source: USA Today, http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2007-07-09-bush-poll_N.htm?csp=34

VIDEO: Gallup compares presidential approval ratings

POLL RESULTS: Full poll results

USA TODAY ON POLITICS: Other polls show similar rating

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