Jan. 26, 2006

Poll: Bush's Approval Remains Low

Heading Into State Of The Union, Just 42 Percent Approve Of President

  • Video Bush Defends Domestic Spying

    In his first press conference of 2006, President Bush addressed the media on several issues including wiretapping, which he says is legal and crucial in the war against terrorism.

  • Video Bush On Katrina Reconstruction

    CBS News RAW: President Bush discussed the rebuilding efforts in Louisiana and Mississippi following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina.

  • President Bush

    President Bush  (AP)

  • Interactive Bush Presidency

    The president's agenda, plus facts, figures, major events and key personalities.

  • Interactive 2005 State Of The Union

    The president's annual message to Congress and the nation.

  • Interactive The 109th Congress

    Meet the leaders and follow the action in the House and Senate.

(CBS)  Fifty-four percent of Americans say the war in Iraq is going badly, versus 45 percent who say it's going well.

Many Americans are not convinced the president is painting an accurate picture of the situation in Iraq. Fifty-eight percent say he describes things as better than they are, while 31 percent say his descriptions are accurate. Three percent say things are worse than the president says.

Although most Americans don’t expect U.S. troops to leave Iraq anytime soon, a third of Americans now think U.S. troops will only have to remain in Iraq less than two years — the most optimistic Americans have been on this question since 2004.


Abramoff Case

Most Americans are not closely following the investigation surrounding lobbyist Jack Abramoff: 60% say they're either not following closely or aren't following at all. Just 11% are following very closely.

Are you following the news about the Abramoff case?

Very closely
11 percent
Somewhat closely
29 percent
Not very closely or not at all
60 percent

To most Americans, these reports that lobbyists may have bribed members of Congress is not surprising: an overwhelming 77 percent say this is simply how things work in Congress, not just a few isolated incidents.

Lobbyists' bribes of Congress are…

Isolated incidents
16 percent
The way things work in Congress
77 percent


Congressional Approval

The public continues to hold a dim view of Congress; just 29 percent approve of its job performance. Sixty-one percent disapprove — the highest number in a decade.

Congress Job Approval

Approve
29 percent
Disapprove
61 percent

Congressional approval has historically been low, rarely rising above 50% in the thirty years the CBS News Poll has been asking about it. But the past year was a particularly rough one for Congress on this measure.

Last January, this Congress garnered 44 percent approval as it was sworn in, only to see that rating tumble to 29 percent by the spring of 2005 after the Terri Schiavo case, and then hit 27 percent in the first week of 2006 after the Abramoff scandal had made headlines.


Health Care

President Bush has mentioned health care in every State of the Union speech he has delivered — often promising tax credits, a Patients’ Bill of Rights, and prescription drug coverage. At the start of Mr. Bush's sixth year in office, Americans continue to have serious concerns about the health care system — they think it needs fundamental changes and don’t see it improving in the next few years.

Nine out of ten Americans think the U.S. health care system needs fundamental changes or needs to be completely rebuilt.

The U.S. health care system needs:

Minor changes
8 percent
Fundamental changes
56 percent
To be completely rebuilt
34 percent

Nearly all Americans – 87 percent - are concerned about their own health care costs, including six in 10 who express a lot of concern.

For detailed information on how CBS News conducts public opinion surveys, click here.


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx

Exclusive Webshow

International recording artist Shakira on love, career and more. Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: