- Sep 6, 2000
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new Washington Post/ABC News poll data
(linked story format edited for posting purposes)
"As the war ended and weeks passed without the discovery of such weapons, some Democrats questioned whether Bush or members of his inner circle deliberately exaggerated the threat to justify going to war -- an argument that the latest Post-ABC poll suggests has had negligible effect on the president's public standing.
The survey also found that support for the war with Iraq as well as for the way Bush is handling the situation in that country remains strong, but may be slowly ebbing."
Key findings and interesting tidbits:
68 percent -- approved of the job Bush was doing as president, down negligibly from April.
More than six in 10 said the decision to go to war was justified even if the United States does not find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
67 percent -- of those interviewed said they approve of the way Bush is dealing with Iraq, down from 75 percent in late April, at the end of the conflict.
64 percent -- said the benefits of the war outweighed its cost, a drop from 70 percent in the late April survey.
56 percent to 38 percent, the public endorsed the use of the military to block Iran from developing nuclear arms.
About one in four Americans incorrectly believes Iraq used chemical or biological weapons against U.S. forces during the conflict.
Concerns over mounting U.S. military casualties have soared largely among Democrats and independents, the survey found. In April, 56 percent of all Democrats believed U.S. troop losses had been acceptable; today 35 percent share that view. The proportion of those who viewed current casualty levels as acceptable dropped by 23 percentage points among political independents, to 43 percent. There was no change among Republicans.
(linked story format edited for posting purposes)
"As the war ended and weeks passed without the discovery of such weapons, some Democrats questioned whether Bush or members of his inner circle deliberately exaggerated the threat to justify going to war -- an argument that the latest Post-ABC poll suggests has had negligible effect on the president's public standing.
The survey also found that support for the war with Iraq as well as for the way Bush is handling the situation in that country remains strong, but may be slowly ebbing."
Key findings and interesting tidbits:
68 percent -- approved of the job Bush was doing as president, down negligibly from April.
More than six in 10 said the decision to go to war was justified even if the United States does not find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
67 percent -- of those interviewed said they approve of the way Bush is dealing with Iraq, down from 75 percent in late April, at the end of the conflict.
64 percent -- said the benefits of the war outweighed its cost, a drop from 70 percent in the late April survey.
56 percent to 38 percent, the public endorsed the use of the military to block Iran from developing nuclear arms.
About one in four Americans incorrectly believes Iraq used chemical or biological weapons against U.S. forces during the conflict.
Concerns over mounting U.S. military casualties have soared largely among Democrats and independents, the survey found. In April, 56 percent of all Democrats believed U.S. troop losses had been acceptable; today 35 percent share that view. The proportion of those who viewed current casualty levels as acceptable dropped by 23 percentage points among political independents, to 43 percent. There was no change among Republicans.
