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Bush Approval Falls to 31% in United States

December 03, 2006

- Public support for George W. Bush fell last month in the United States, according to a poll by Harris Interactive. 31 per cent of respondents approve of the American president's performance, down three points since early October.

Bush—a Republican—earned a second four-year term in the November 2004 presidential election. Yesterday in his weekly radio address, Bush discussed the situation in the Middle East, saying, "Failure in Iraq would embolden the extremists who hate America and want nothing more than to see our demise. It would strengthen the hand of those who are seeking to undermine young democracies across the region and give the extremists an open field to overthrow moderate governments, take control of countries, impose their rule on millions, and threaten the American people."

American voters renewed the House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate on Nov. 7. The Democratic Party will take control of the House of Representatives for the first time since 1994, with at least 232 lawmakers. A victory for the Democratic candidates for the Senate in Montana and Virginia also gave the party a majority in the upper house.

Polling Data

How would you rate the job George W. Bush is doing as president—excellent, pretty good, only fair, or poor?

Nov. 21

Oct. 9

Sept. 11

Aug. 21

Positive

31%

34%

38%

34%

Negative

67%

64%

61%

65%

Source: Harris Interactive
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 1,001 American adults, conducted from Nov. 17 to Nov. 21, 2006. Margin of error is 3 per cent.