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President Bush’s popularity still sliding:
Survey
WASHINGTON—President George W. Bush’s approval rating is continuing to
slide, with 58 percent of those surveyed in a new poll out Sunday
unhappy at the way he is going his job.
Thirty-nine percent gave Bush a positive rating, down from 42 percent on
September 11 of this year, according to the poll by The Washington Post
and ABC News..
It was taken among 600 people October 28-29, as Bush’s White House was
rocked by a top official’s indictment in a CIA leak investigation, and
after the defeat of his Supreme Court pick Harriet Miers.
The president’s popularity has also been dented by high gasoline prices
and fallout from Hurricane Katrina.
Asked about ethics in Bush’s administration, the poll found 64 percent
believed Bush’s handling of the area was fair or poor; 34 percent said
they believed it was good or excellent.
And 69 percent of those surveyed said Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief
of staff I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby’s indictment represented a serious
crime, compared to 26 percent who said it was a minor or technical
crime.
Libby, 55, announced his resignation after he was indicted in a case
that ignited fresh controversy over the US rationale for war with Iraq.
He faces one count of obstruction of justice, two counts of perjury and
two counts of making false statements to FBI agents looking into the
leaking of the identity of CIA agent Valery Plame.
Libby faces up to 30 years in jail and a 1.25 million-dollar fine if
convicted on all five counts alleged by special prosecutor Patrick
Fitzgerald, which raise the prospect of a gripping and potentially
politically damaging trial.
Bush’s political guru Karl Rove, also in Fitzgerald’s sights during a
two-year probe, was not indicted, but will remain under investigation,
his lawyer said.
Fitzgerald was given the task of finding out whether senior Bush
administration officials broke the law by knowingly exposing Plame, wife
of former diplomat Joseph Wilson.
Wilson had claimed her cover was blown to discredit him, after he
questioned whether the Bush administration had “twisted” intelligence in
the push to war with Iraq.—Agencies |