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Released: October 20, 2003 Bush Job Performance Under 50; Leads all Democrats; Still Behind on Re-Elect and Against Generic Democrat; Majority of Likely Voters Proud of Bush, New Zogby Poll Reveals
Bush Job Performance Under 50; Leads all Democrats; Still Behind on Re-Elect and Against Generic Democrat; Majority of Likely Voters Proud of Bush, New Zogby Poll Reveals
Likely voters remain divided on President George W. Bush’s job performance, with half (49%) saying it is excellent or good and 51% saying fair or poor. Earlier in September, the president’s job performance rating reached the lowest point since pre-Inauguration, with 45% positive and 54% negative, then bounced up slightly in late September polling.
Bush Job Performance Positive % Negative % October 15-18, 2003 49 51 September 22-24, 2003 50 49 September 3-5, 2003 45 54 August 2003 52 48 July 2003 53 46 March 2003 54 45 September 2002 64 36 September 2001 82 17 August 2001 50 49 January 2001 42 36
The Zogby America telephone poll of 921 likely voters chosen at random was conducted October 15 - 18, and has a margin of error of +/- 3.3%. Error margins are higher in sub-groups.
Overall opinion of Bush slipped slightly from September Zogby numbers. Nearly six in ten (56%) have a favorable opinion and 42% an unfavorable opinion now, compared to 58% favorable and 41% unfavorable in September 22 - 24 polling.
The president would outpoll any of the current leading Democratic contenders if the election were held today. He would earn 46% of the vote against retired General Wesley Clark’s 37%; would beat former Vermont Governor Dr. Howard Dean, 47% - 39%; would poll 45% against Massachusetts Senator John Kerry’s 41%; would win over Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt 47% - 38%, and would beat Connecticut Senator Joseph Lieberman, 46% - 38%.
Yet when matched against an unnamed (generic) Democratic presidential contender, Bush would lose that theoretical match-up with 43%, compared to the Democrat’s 45%. In September polling, Bush would have lost to a generic Democratic, 41% - 45%.
Date Bush % Any Democrat % October 15 – 18, 2003 43% 45% September 22-24, 2003 41% 45% September 3-5, 2003 40% 47% August 2003 43% 43% June 2003 44% 37%
The President remains behind in his ‘re-elect’ numbers, where 42% of likely voters now say he deserves to be re-elected, while half (50%) say they think it is time for someone new. In early September polling, 52% said it was time for someone new, and just two in five (40%) said he deserves re-election.
Date Re-Elect Bush Someone New October 15-18, 2003 42% 50% Sept 22-24, 2003 43 49 Sept 3-5, 2003 40 52 August 2003 45 48 June 2003 49 38
Only about two in five (43%) say they think the US is headed in the right direction, while half (50%) feel it is on the wrong track.
When asked if they are proud or ashamed of George W. Bush as President, nearly three in five (57%) likely voters say they are proud, one-quarter (26%) say they are ashamed, and one-fifth (18%) are not sure. Nearly nine in ten (87%) Republicans say they are proud, compared to 4% who say they are ashamed. A majority (51%) of Independents are proud, with 30% ‘ashamed,” while 31% of Democrats say they are proud of the president and 43% are ashamed.
Four Top Democratic Contenders Just Four Points Apart
Dean tops the list of nine Democratic hopefuls with 12%, followed by Clark with 10%, Kerry at 9% and Lieberman at 8%. Gephardt and former IL Senator Carol Mosley Braun are tied at 5%, while NC Senator John Edwards and civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton are tied at 3%. Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, who officially declared his candidacy last week, earned 1%. Six percent of the likely Democratic primary voters would opt for still another candidate, and nearly two in five (38%) remain undecided.
In late September national polling, Clark and Dean shared the lead with 12% each. No other candidate reached double digits, and Kerry led with 7%, followed by Gephardt at 6%. Lieberman had 5% of the vote, and Sharpton and Mosley Braun tied at 4% each. Edwards had 2%, and Kucinich and Florida Senator Bob Graham earned 1% each. Graham dropped from the race prior to the most recent poll.
Polling of Democratic contenders involved 500 likely Democratic primary voters, and has a margin of error of +/- 4.5%.
The poll was part of Zogby International’s “Road to Boston
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