Polls Show That Iraq Hasnt Hurt Bush
Political analyst Earl Ofari Hutchinson analyzes recent polls that show the Iraq war hasn't terminally hurt Bush. He tells why wars are unreliable public barometers of the popularity or unpopularity of America's presidents and political leaders.
(PRWEB) September 27, 2004 -- Two recent national polls on the Iraq war and the presidential race found that the war has not significantnly damaged President Bush's re-election chances. "Iraq has not been the catastrophic issue for the Bush presidency that many Democrats preddicted and hoped," says political analyst Earl Ofari Hutchinson," Wars generally have not been the issue that has made or unmade American presidents and that includes the Vietnam War."
In the September 27 edition of the Hutchinson Report Newsletter, Hutchinson assesses recent polls that show the Iraq war has not hurt President Bushs reelection chances. Hutchinson also features disurbing and controversial facts and opinions that explode media predictions and the Democrats hopes that the Iraq war will sink the Bush presidency. The Hutchinson Report also assesses why the polls show surprisingly strong voter support for the war despite rising battlefield casualties, and how the polls will impact the outcome of the presidential election. The Hutchinson Report presents cutting edge features and information about the presidential campaign as well as other hot button national political issues.
They include features on: the payoff of boxing promoter Don King to key Republicans to kill a boxing reform measure, how the Democrats have manipulated black voters, how both Republicans and Democrats purge ex-felons from the voting roles, how Republicans are staving off a revolt against Bush by evangelical voters, and the stealth campaign to destroy Teresa Heinz Kerry.
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