While googling for something else I came across an "Ottawa Citizen" article that may help answer two questions that have been troubling me:
1. After more than a week of getting hammered over Richard Clarke's book and testimony, how can Dubya's numbers be going up?
2. How have millions of Americans been fooled into believing that Dubya is a strong leader, that "he's a uniter not a divider", and that "he's brought dignity back into the White House"?
Here's a Canadian view on the popularity of Fox "News" and the comfort it gives both to the Bush White House and to the millions of regular Fox viewers. From
http://www.friends.ca/News/Friends_News/archives/articles11010301.asp'Right of way: How Fox News beat CNN at its own game by James Gordon
Source : Ottawa Citizen, November 01, 2003
... Fox News network launched on Oct. 7, 1996, to about 17 million subscribers, and quickly gained millions more. Owner Rupert Murdoch, whose media empire includes the Fox broadcasting network, 20th Century Fox, and publisher HarperCollins, installed Roger Ailes as his news channel's chairman and chief executive.... After hiring prominent conservative journalists and commentators such as Brit Hume and Bill O'Reilly to set the network's tone, Ailes set to work catching his main competition, the Cable News Network, and attacking anyone associated with it.... Since then, all its shows have continued that upward trend. Fox has become the undisputed champion of cable news, regularly trouncing CNN and MSNBC in the ratings....
Tom McPhail, a former Carleton University professor who now teaches communications at the University of Missouri,... says {Fox} benefited from the new political culture of patriotism and "us vs. them" mentality that followed during months after the terrorist attacks in the U.S. "They've thrown the book on objectivity out the window, and become the unofficial P.R. agency for the Bush White House," he says. Fox further solidified its reputation as catering to ethno-centric Americans during wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. It was accused of being nothing more than a cheerleader for the administration's overseas campaigns, and refusing to delve into deeper issues. In one New York Times article, {Brit} Hume, managing editor and anchor of Fox's 6 p.m. newscast said he avoided giving too much airtime to reports about civilian casualties in Afghanistan. "OK, war is hell, people die," Mr. Hume said at the time. "We know we're at war. The fact that some people are dying, is that really news? And is it news to be treated in a semi-straight-faced way? I think not."
Whether Fox's jingoism or Republican slant is a bad for news is debatable, but it is certainly one of the driving forces behind the network's popularity, according to Aly Colon of the Poynter Institute. He says Fox tries to address a particular constituency that wants to see the news in a way that reflects their worldview about government and issues, which many U.S. citizens have felt has been not available. He sees it as a possible HARBINGER OF A RETURN TO THE WAY JOURNALISM WAS LOOKED AT BEFORE THE 1950S. People bought newspapers they knew were in line with their political point of view. Naturally, each of those newspapers believed its slant was "true," and that the other six newspapers available were full of lies. Mr. Colon says Fox truly believes it's being objective, and that all who disagree with it are fundamentally wrong. ...
Rich Hanley, head of graduate studies in communication at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut, says despite the official line from the network's press office, Fox is well aware it's not being objective, and that's the secret to its success. "People know what they're getting when they tune in to Fox News, because they're ruthless in their conservative focus," says Mr. Hanley, who has appeared on the network's most popular show, the O'Reilly Factor, several times. "Roger Ailes has basically created a community of like-minded folks in the cable news environment, and all their programming comes off the same philosophical stake."'