President Bush's job-approval rating fell, with 34% of Americans voting him "excellent" or "good," down from 38% in September, according to a new Harris Interactive poll. IN THE POLLS
Bush's approval rating peaked shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks. It has posted gains off and on since then, but it has never regained that high ground.
Sixty-four percent of U.S. adults now have a negative view of Mr. Bush's job performance, compared with 61% who ranked him "only fair" or "poor" in a similar poll last month. The drop follows a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll that showed the president's job approval rating fell to 39% from 42% earlier in October.
With less than a month to go before the midterm congressional elections, 47% of registered voters said they would vote for a Democratic candidate, compared with 35% who said they would pick a Republican candidate. When asked about recent Capitol Hill scandals involving charges of corruption and sexual improprieties, 64% said they believed those activities were the just the "tip of the iceberg," compared with 25% who believed they were "isolated incidents."
The Harris telephone poll of 1,001 U.S. adults showed a larger majority believe things in the country "have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track," at 62% compared with 59% last month. In terms of the most important issues that the U.S. government should address: 29% said the war was most important, while 15% said the economy, 13% said health care and 12% said immigration.