August 31, 2008

Poll: GOP Delegates Strongly Back Bush

CBS/NYT Poll Finds That Delegates View Of President Sharply Different Than Most Americans, Forcing McCain Into Balancing Act

  • President Bush and Republican nominee-in-waiting, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. share a laugh as they speak to reporters in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, March 5, 2008.

    President Bush and Republican nominee-in-waiting, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. share a laugh as they speak to reporters in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, March 5, 2008.  (AP)

  • Photo Essay Endorser-In-Chief

    President Bush backs Republican nominee-in-waiting John McCain.

  • Photo Essay John McCain

    Some call him a hero, some a maverick. Will Americans call him Mr. President?

(CBS)  The vast majority of delegates to the Republican National Convention approve of the job George W. Bush has done as president, putting them at odds with most American people and forcing soon-to-be Republican presidential nominee John McCain into a balancing act as he looks to fire up delegates in St. Paul while also courting a nationwide audience.

A CBS News/New York Times survey released on the cusp of the Republican National Convention found that nearly 80 percent of Republican delegates approve of Mr. Bush’s performance as president, an approval rating more than 50 percentage points higher than his approval rating among all Americans, which stands at 28 percent. (Mr. Bush’s approval rating among Republicans overall is 63 percent.)

Delegates may understand if McCain distances himself from Mr. Bush during the convention: Forty-four percent acknowledge that it would not help the presumptive Republican nominee were Mr. Bush to campaign on his behalf in their state. Nearly half say that the Bush presidency has weakened the Republican Party.

Read The Complete Polls
Who Are The RNC Delegates?
McCain and Bush
Views On The Issues

Despite Mr. Bush’s high approval rating among delegates, they are not uniformly enthusiastic about the president. While 40 percent strongly approve of the job he’s done, 39 percent somewhat approve.

Bush’s biggest backers among the delegates are evangelicals and conservatives. By contrast, only 21 percent of moderates, a group that comprises one-quarter of delegates, strongly approving of the president’s performance.

Nearly 40 percent of delegates want McCain’s administration to be more conservative than Mr. Bush’s should he become president. Fourteen percent would prefer that McCain be less conservative. (Thirty-five percent say they aren’t sure.)

Forty-three percent say they aren’t sure what, exactly, a McCain presidency would bring. Just over half the delegates describe McCain as moderate, while 42 percent call him conservative.

Far and away, McCain’s experience is seen by these delegates as his greatest strength - 36 percent volunteer it. (The opposite - inexperience - was cited most by Democratic delegates as Barack Obama's weakness.)

National security and foreign policy (18 percent), honesty (11 percent), and leadership (10 percent) are also offered by delegates as McCain’s strengths.

McCain’s age tops the list of weaknesses - it was volunteered by 19 percent of Republican delegates. Being too moderate or not conservative enough is a distant second at 8 percent, followed by not being a good speaker or communicator at 6 percent. Seventeen percent say McCain doesn’t have any weaknesses as a candidate.

Seventy-four percent of delegates are confident that McCain will win the election in November.

Who They Are:

The Republican delegation is a pretty homogeneous group: 93 percent of the Republican delegates are white. Five percent are Hispanic, and two percent are African American. (The Democratic delegation is much more diverse: it is 23 percent African American and 11 percent Hispanic.)

While the Democratic delegation is split roughly evenly between men and women, roughly two-thirds of the Republican delegation is male. Thirty-two percent of the Republican delegates are women, down from 43 percent in 2004. The average age of Republicans delegates is 54.

About a third of Republican delegates are white evangelicals, and 43 percent describe themselves as regular churchgoers.

Thirty-four percent say their net worth is over $1 million. (Twenty-two percent of the Democratic delegation has a net worth that high.) Seventeen percent say their net worth is between $500,000 and $1 million, while 32 percent estimate their net worth under $500,000.

Six in 10 of the Republican delegates have a firearm in their household, and one quarter of are members of the NRA. Only 3 percent of Democratic delegates are NRA members.

Just five percent of Republican delegates are union members. Twenty-three percent have served in the Armed Forces, and 24 percent say they considered themselves Democrats at one point.

©MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by aljack3 September 3, 2008 9:38 PM EDT
Cracker jack reporting CBS. Did you ask the delegates at the Democratic convention last week if they support the Democratic congress which has an even lower approval rating than President Bush? I''m sure their responses would put them "at odds" with most Americans as well.
Reply to this comment
by jsl45 September 2, 2008 8:00 PM EDT
I just hope I get one chance to boo and jeer Bush after he leaves office. I hope the the American people don''t allow Bush to show his face in public without boos and jeers....the worst president in American history.
Reply to this comment
by dmgenet September 2, 2008 7:41 PM EDT
The stats are not a surprise but only more confirmation that the moderates have, again, abandoned the Republican party. The details do NOT need to be detailed here as they are a matter of history.

Again, the proverb, ''power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely'' is proven again.
Reply to this comment
by tonyd_31 September 2, 2008 7:40 PM EDT
Surprise, surprise. What a bunch of brain-dead people. Everyone of them should be banished from ever voting in another election.
Reply to this comment
by superdem September 2, 2008 7:16 PM EDT
80% of the Republican delegates APPROVE of Bush''s performance as President - that''s unbelievable. Talk about ELITE - these people have no clue, none whatsoever. I saw the crowd on TV - ALL WHITE, as far as I could see. IT could have been an American Nazi convention, or a KKK convention. We truly MUST beat these people. They also POLITICIZED the Gustav coverage - proudly crowing that all the Gulf and affected state governors were Republicans, while they stood in front of the NATIONAL GUARD helicopters and relief crews, paid for with TAXPAYER MONEY. I found that quite offensive. Sure the Republicans want that low-tax, easy living Southern lifestyle, but when the flood comes, they''re right in there for the federal aid. Americans must THROW ALL REPUBLICANS OUT !!!
Reply to this comment
by briannorwood September 2, 2008 6:08 PM EDT
"GOP Delegates Strongly Support Bush"

And all this time, I have been wondering where these supposed Bush supporters were! I am from Pennsylvania, and I haven''t come across one of those in years!
Reply to this comment
by truth-b-toll September 2, 2008 6:02 PM EDT
SHEEPLE...Refuse to confused by the FACTS! GOD help us.
Reply to this comment
by dronemonk September 2, 2008 6:02 PM EDT
For shame. Reminds me of the Soviet Politburo.
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by dronemonk September 2, 2008 6:01 PM EDT
The GOP has lost its way...and tried to compensate by doubling its efforts.
Reply to this comment
by briannorwood September 2, 2008 5:59 PM EDT
"GOP Delegates Strongly Support Bush"

And all this time, I have been wondering where these supposed Bush supporters were! I am from Pennsylvania, and I haven''t come across one of those in years!
Reply to this comment
by truth-b-toll September 2, 2008 5:57 PM EDT
SHEEPLE...Refuse to confused by the FACTS! GOD help us.
Reply to this comment
by briannorwood September 2, 2008 5:56 PM EDT
"GOP Delegates Strongly Support Bush"

And all this time, I have been wondering where these supposed Bush supporters were! I am from Pennsylvania, and I haven''t come across one of those in years!
Reply to this comment
by truth-b-toll September 2, 2008 5:55 PM EDT
SHEEPLE...
Reply to this comment
by truth-b-toll September 2, 2008 5:53 PM EDT
SHEEPLE...
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by noloyalisti September 2, 2008 4:40 PM EDT
God forgive these Grand Oil Party pigs. They hate life, American and the Constitution. All they pray for is money and power (in God''s name). They car nothing about the American people.
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by johnpatrick9 September 2, 2008 4:23 PM EDT
If you live in an insane asylum the nutjobs usually do agree with one another and so it is with these dimwit republicans.
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by johnpatrick9 September 2, 2008 4:21 PM EDT
.
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by bmadeline-2009 September 2, 2008 2:32 PM EDT
How sad is that? I guess if they admitted he is a liar and war criminal, they would be one also
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by bmadeline-2009 September 2, 2008 2:28 PM EDT
How sad is that? I guess if they admitted he is a liar and war criminal, they would be one also
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by shouterguy September 2, 2008 2:07 PM EDT
With the advent of %u201Cblowhard%u201D Rove, %u201CLittle Black Manchild%u201D Limbuagh and %u201CNorthern Exposure%u201D Sarah Palin, The G.O. P. has proved itself to be the Party of name-calling, racism and utterly wacko judgment.

It shows:



RCP Average

Obama 49.0

McCain 43.0

Obama +6.0

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