The majority of Americans -- if they could talk to the man they elected to be the top executive and commander in chief of the country -- would tell President Bush to focus on developing an exit strategy from Iraq and removing U.S. troops from that country. One in four would tell the president to stay the course or even to be more aggressive.
About one-third of the American adult population believes the Bible is the actual word of God and is to be taken literally word for word, a new Gallup poll reveals. This percentage is only slightly lower than several decades ago.
By far the most bipartisan issue of our time, the need for immigration reform or enforcement is the most economically and morally important duty of our time. Please participate so we may provide this data to our elected officials. It is a very complex issue, so feel free to make suggestions on additional polling data you would like to see col
As President Bush and Congress hammer out an Iraq war funding bill, a CBS News/New York Times poll shows the number of Americans who say the war is going badly has reached a new high, rising 10 percent this month to 76 percent.
What's going on? Gallup reports today a sudden plunge in its regular "satisfaction" index. Only 25% of Americans now say they satisfied with the state of their country -- down 8% in just one month -- and one of the lowest ever measured.
Poll: 39% of Public Already Support Impeachment While hack lamestream news anchors and reporters mock impeachment advocates like Dennis Kucinich as far left wackos, a new poll shows that 39% of responents supported impeachment of Bush AND Cheney, and that 42% of indepents, the people who will decide the next election, support impeachment.
It's hard to say which is worse news for Republicans: that George W. Bush now has the worst approval rating of an American president in a generation, or that he seems to be dragging every '08 Republican presidential candidate down with him.
The French dislike themselves even more than the Americans dislike them, according to an opinion poll published on Friday. The survey of six nations, carried out for the International Herald Tribune daily and France 24 TV station, said 44 percent of French people thought badly of themselves.
10 out of 15 countries believe "that the United States cannot be trusted to "act responsibly in the world." The new PIPA poll also finds that majorities in 13 out of 15 publics polled say the United States is "playing the role of world policeman more than it should be."
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Congress and the White House will move this week toward a final showdown over a contested war funding bill with most Americans trusting Democrats over President Bush to set Iraq policy
Americans are divided on whether it was right to fire radio personality Don Imus for his controversial remark about the Rutgers women's basketball team, with a vast gap between blacks and whites on the issue.
This idea came to me from several venues. After I started writing for this site and started reading viewer comments and especially after reading what the critics were saying, I realized that there are quite a few people out there that believe that the Simpsons have taken a creative dive ever since season 10.
Alright. You know it, I know it. Some of the romances on The Office have major cringe factor going on. But which couple has the most cringe power? Now by cringe-worthy, I mean that when you watch this couple you almost become embarrassed for them because they're so messed up.
Most Americans believe Atty. Gen. Alberto Gonzales should resign because of the controversy over his office's firing of federal prosecutors and a big majority want White House aides to testify under oath about the issue, the Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg Poll has found. The survey, conducted Thursday through Monday, found that 53% said Gonzales sh
Public approval for Congress is at its highest level in a year as Democrats mark 100 days in power and step up their confrontation with President Bush over his handling of the Iraq War, the issue that overshadows all others.
resident Bush is reaching levels of consistency that no White House would want. Bush's job-approval rating in a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Monday through Thursday is 38%. His standing has stayed below 40% for seven consecutive months.
The latest USA Today/Gallup poll finds 34% of Americans approving of the job Bush is doing. Bush was last above 40% approval in September 2006, and his run of six consecutive months below 40% is one of the longest in Gallup's polling history. The historical average for Gallup's presidential approval rating is 55%.
President Bush's job approval rating has sunk to just under zero for the first time, according to new polls. Polling experts say that this is an all-time low, and that only certain toxic molds have come close to those numbers in the past.
Very few Americans believe Iran represents a danger for their country, according to a poll by New York Times and CBS News. Only 10 per cent of respondents think Iran is a threat to the United States that requires military action now, down 11 points since mid-February.
After four years of war, Americans are increasingly pessimistic about the prospects for success in Iraq and a majority wants U.S. troops to begin coming home, according to an analysis of data from CBS News and CBS News/New York Times polls.
Americans understand global warming, they want solutions to climate change, and they're ready to act on their own, according to a national poll conducted for Yale University.
President Bush , in a bitter showdown with Congress over Iraq , has crept up a speck from an all-time low in his job approval rating. But his standing is the weakest of any second-term president at this point in 56 years.
McCain beat former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani by two votes, 164-162, according to Spartanburg County GOP chairman Rick Beltram. California Rep. Duncan Hunter came in third with 158 votes.
Maybe it is Giuliani time, after all. Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has pulled far ahead of Arizona Sen. John McCain in a hypothetical head-to-head GOP presidential primary matchup, according to the latest NEWSWEEK Poll-beating McCain 59 percent to 34 percent.
The core of Giuliani's strength is in the Northeast, where he has a 50% to 23% advantage over McCain. But even in the West, he leads McCain by 5 points.
Did you miss the controversy last week? In their incredibly controversial poll, Dan and Jennifer asked: "Would you ever consider swinging or polyamory?" Wow, over 2300 Netscape readers spoke out and the results really floored me. Check it out and cast your vote if you haven't already!
With Bush's approval ratings mired by the unpopular war, Americans trust congressional Democrats over Bush to handle the situation in Iraq by a 54 percent to 34 percent margin.
Dan and Jennifer's recent article "My Best Friend's a Swinger - Will She Burn in Hell?" sparked such conversation and controversy; they just had to take a poll. Answer this short poll to see where you fit in with the rest of the world on this incredibly controversial topic.
A new poll indicates that a majority of Americans would vote for a gay person for president. The Gallup survey finds that 55% of respondents would vote for a gay candidate if he or she were "generally well-qualified."








