Topic: GWB doing a Better job Than bHo | |
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And, he ain't even president any longer.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() George W. Bush’s job approval rating as president has spiked to 47 percent, according to a Gallup poll released Monday. That’s 1 point higher than President Barack Obama’s job approval rating in a poll taken the same week. This is the first time Gallup asked Americans to retrospectively rate Bush’s job performance. And it was a stunning turnaround from his low point of 25 percent in November 2008. The 47 percent number is 13 points higher than the last Gallup poll taken before Bush left office in 2009 and the highest rating for him since before Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Still, Bush’s 51 percent disapproval rating means he’s only one of two U.S. presidents in the past 50 years whose disapproval exceeds approval. The other is Richard Nixon, who resigned in disgrace 36 years ago and whose approval rating stands at 29 percent. Obama’s stumbles and dimming public memories of Bush’s shortcomings appear to be helping fuel the more positive reassessment of him. And, in recent weeks, Bush’s tour to promote his new memoir, “Decision Points,” and the groundbreaking of his new library in Dallas have generated mostly positive press. Bush’s 47 percent approval rating also raises serious questions about the wisdom of the White House’s decision to relentlessly attack him in the months before the Democrats’ historic losses in the midterm elections. The president had kept warning a House Republican majority would return to Bush-era policies. But Obama’s message did little to galvanize the liberal base, and independents flocked to the GOP on Election Day. Bush’s rebound gives some credence to what he has long said — that history will eventually judge his presidency. One of his role models is Harry Truman, who left office deeply unpopular but now gets credit for laying the groundwork to fight the Cold War. Bush sees parallels with his own efforts in the early days of the global war on terror. |
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Part of Bush's unpopularity was due to bad press for wars, spending, and attacks by the left in an effort to make Obama look like the opposite of Bush and the hope for the future.
The future is now. A comparison of Obama on the war issues would indicate that he must now think Bush is right because he is doing what Bush was doing and the exact opposite of what he said he would do. A comparison of spending policies doesn't make Bush look so bad either. Obama's weakness in foreign policy is now bubbling to the surface, again showing Bush in a more favorable light. The young, always a target of the liberal press, who believed what was written a few years ago, are now seeing a dose of reality. |
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Bush was on Leno recently and the more I watched him the more I wished he was still in office sans Cheyney. |
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And, he ain't even president any longer. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() George W. Bush’s job approval rating as president has spiked to 47 percent, according to a Gallup poll released Monday. That’s 1 point higher than President Barack Obama’s job approval rating in a poll taken the same week. This is the first time Gallup asked Americans to retrospectively rate Bush’s job performance. And it was a stunning turnaround from his low point of 25 percent in November 2008. The 47 percent number is 13 points higher than the last Gallup poll taken before Bush left office in 2009 and the highest rating for him since before Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Still, Bush’s 51 percent disapproval rating means he’s only one of two U.S. presidents in the past 50 years whose disapproval exceeds approval. The other is Richard Nixon, who resigned in disgrace 36 years ago and whose approval rating stands at 29 percent. Obama’s stumbles and dimming public memories of Bush’s shortcomings appear to be helping fuel the more positive reassessment of him. And, in recent weeks, Bush’s tour to promote his new memoir, “Decision Points,” and the groundbreaking of his new library in Dallas have generated mostly positive press. Bush’s 47 percent approval rating also raises serious questions about the wisdom of the White House’s decision to relentlessly attack him in the months before the Democrats’ historic losses in the midterm elections. The president had kept warning a House Republican majority would return to Bush-era policies. But Obama’s message did little to galvanize the liberal base, and independents flocked to the GOP on Election Day. Bush’s rebound gives some credence to what he has long said — that history will eventually judge his presidency. One of his role models is Harry Truman, who left office deeply unpopular but now gets credit for laying the groundwork to fight the Cold War. Bush sees parallels with his own efforts in the early days of the global war on terror. Obama's approval rating is at 41% (and going down) based on other polls. I miss President Bush. |
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Well I said this during the Presidential races that Obama was all Charisma. That he wouldn't do or be able to do the things he was talking about. Thought I did think he might win because most peeople wouldn't realize this.
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