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Cr122

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Obama Approval Rating Hits 60 Percent, Highest in Two Years
Published May 11, 2011
Associated Press

obama-waves_051111.jpg


WASHINGTON -- President Obama's approval rating has hit its highest point in two years -- 60 percent -- and more than half of Americans now say he deserves to be re-elected, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll taken after U.S. forces killed Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
In worrisome signs for Republicans, the president's standing improved not just on foreign policy but also on the economy, and independent Americans -- a key voting bloc in the November 2012 presidential election -- caused the overall uptick in support by sliding back to Obama after fleeing for much of the past two years.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/201...-hits-60-percent-highest-years/#ixzz1M6ZsGXIp

Comfortable majorities of the public now call Obama a strong leader who will keep America safe. Nearly three-fourths -- 73 percent -- also now say they are confident that Obama can effectively handle terrorist threats. And he improved his standing on Afghanistan, Iraq and the United States' relationships with other countries.
Despite a sluggish recovery from the Great Recession, 52 percent of Americans now approve of Obama's stewardship of the economy, giving him his best rating on that issue since the early days of his presidency; 52 percent also now like how he's handling the nation's stubbornly high 9 percent unemployment.
The economy remains Americans' top issue.

Impressions of the nation's fiscal outlook have improved following last Friday's positive jobs report, which showed American companies are on a hiring spree. More people now say that the economy got better in the past month and that it's likely to continue doing so in the coming year.
Also, more Americans -- 45 percent, up from 35 percent in March -- say the country is headed in the right direction. Still, about half -- 52 percent -- say it's on the wrong track, meaning Obama still has work to do to convince a restive public to stay with the status quo.
Some have seen enough to know they'll stick with him.

"I was happy about bin Laden," says Brenda Veckov, 42, of Hollidaysburg, Pa. "I put my fists in the air. To me, it was just a little bit of closure for the United States."
"The president made the right decisions on this one. And I will vote for him again."
Not everyone has such an optimistic view of Obama.
"I'm very concerned" about the country, says Susan Demarest in Snellville, Ga., 56, who didn't support the Democrat last time and won't this time. "I'm in my 50s and I worry that I'm not going to be able to retire at a reasonable age and enjoy the end of my life because of Medicare and Social Security and the debt of the country." Still, she says Obama doesn't carry all of the blame.

Obama's overall political boost comes at an important time. He is embarking on his re-election campaign and is in the early days of a debate with Republicans who control the House over raising the country's debt limit. But it's unclear how long Obama's strengthened standing will last in the aftermath of bin Laden's death.
Americans say they overwhelmingly approve of the military's handling of the risky nighttime mission in Abbottabad, Pakistan. But it hasn't changed public opinion on the war in Afghanistan; most still are opposed to it, and a big majority favors Obama's plan to withdraw all combat troops by 2014.
Overall, Obama's approval rating is up slightly from 53 percent in March and a 47 percent low point following last fall's midterm congressional elections, in which Republicans won control of the House and gained seats in the Senate. It was 64 percent in May 2009, just months after he was sworn into office.
Also, 53 percent now say he deserves to be re-elected; 43 percent say he should be fired, making it the first time in an AP-GfK poll that more people say he should get a second term than not.

"I have the impression that Barack Obama works really hard for Americans and that I see his leadership as something that should be continued," says independent voter Allison Kaplan, 25, in Austin, Texas, who voted for him in 2008. She praises the administration for handling bin Laden's raid well -- "the way that it happened was the correct way" -- and it reinforced her support of the president.
Nearly two-thirds of Americans who call themselves political independents now approve of him; only about half did in March. They were critical to his 2008 victory but many had fled as his administration increased government spending and passed a sweeping health care overhaul. They could just as easily turn away again between now and next fall.

Bryan Noonan, 23, of Hampstead, N.H., is one of those independents. He backed Obama in 2008 and is likely to vote for the president again, given the other options.
"I haven't been real impressed by the Republicans," he says. He doesn't hold Obama accountable for the sluggish economy or rising gas prices, issues Noonan says seem "out of his hands. It's not like there's a magic solution."
Noonan likes Obama's foreign policies and applauds the killing of bin Laden, saying: "I was pretty much relieved, happy to hear that we got him. The president absolutely deserves credit."

Among the poll's other findings:
-- Sixty-nine percent say Obama will keep America safe, up from 61 percent in March; 65 percent call him a "strong leader," up from 57 percent.
-- Sixty-three percent say Obama cares about people like them; 63 percent also say that he understands the problems of ordinary Americans.
-- Sixty-three percent view Obama favorably, up from 59 percent in March.
Still, his re-election is far from certain. And there are warning signs in the poll.
--Nearly two-thirds of people -- 61 percent -- disapprove of his handling on gas prices, even though there's little a president can do about them.
--Less than half give him positive marks on dealing with the federal budget deficit or taxes, two big upcoming issues.
The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted May 5-9 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,001 adults nationwide and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points.
 

dbair1967

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its not hard to find 60% approval rating when you call zip codes where 90% of the people are dumbass liberals
 
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Cr122

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I have to tell you I was impressed when they killed Osama Bin Laden.

Obama did say he would hunt down Osama and kill him, and he did just that.

Now let's see if he can get a handle on the economy and fuel prices.
 

dbair1967

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Now let's see if he can get a handle on the economy and fuel prices.

And if you believe that he will, I have some quality ocean front property in Arizona for you...great prices!
 

Plymkr

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**** this. Canada here I come..

If this jackhole gets re elected.

And if I ever get money. lol

We are so ****ed. Doesnt' matter who is in office. Just ride the wave and go down in a blaze of glory. leave nothing behind.
 

Cythim

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I have to tell you I was impressed when they killed Osama Bin Laden.

Obama did say he would hunt down Osama and kill him, and he did just that.

Now let's see if he can get a handle on the economy and fuel prices.

The economy has turned around but fuel prices will remain high, and rightfully so. I just hope Congress holds true to their threat of taking away tax breaks for the oil companies.
 

sbk92

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It's sad that the Bin Laden killing has become a political issue.

Instead of just uniting and celebrating what took years of hard work and sacrifice from too many people, and a little bit of justice for those who have waited too long for it, it's yet another D vs. R event.

That's all I hear from the talking heads around here. Republicans failing to give any credit to the current administration for the done deed and Democrats refusing to acknowledge it wouldn't have been possible without the efforts of the administration before it.

D vs. R. For life.
 

Cythim

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It's sad that the Bin Laden killing has become a political issue.

Instead of just uniting and celebrating what took years of hard work and sacrifice from too many people, and a little bit of justice for those who have waited too long for it, it's yet another D vs. R event.

That's all I hear from the talking heads around here. Republicans failing to give any credit to the current administration for the done deed and Democrats refusing to acknowledge it wouldn't have been possible without the efforts of the administration before it.

D vs. R. For life.

I hate it as well but I knew it would happen. He was going to go down eventually and there would be talk over who gets credit and who does not. Everything is politics and that is how it must be. I give credit to our fine military men and women who made this possible. The politicians enabled the military but they were not on the ground nor in the field gather intel.

In the end the only way this will alter my vote is to push me away from those who make this a political issue.
 

Bob Sacamano

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I have to tell you I was impressed when they killed Osama Bin Laden.

Obama did say he would hunt down Osama and kill him, and he did just that.

Now let's see if he can get a handle on the economy and fuel prices.

He didn't do shit, it was just 1 trillion dollars that got Osama which started before Obama assumed office.
 
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Cr122

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He didn't do shit, it was just 1 trillion dollars that got Osama which started before Obama assumed office.

And it only took 10 f'king years to capture this bum on dialysis?

Not sticking up for Obama, but what the f was Bush doing all these years?
 

dbair1967

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It's sad that the Bin Laden killing has become a political issue.

Instead of just uniting and celebrating what took years of hard work and sacrifice from too many people, and a little bit of justice for those who have waited too long for it, it's yet another D vs. R event.

That's all I hear from the talking heads around here. Republicans failing to give any credit to the current administration for the done deed and Democrats refusing to acknowledge it wouldn't have been possible without the efforts of the administration before it.

D vs. R. For life.

I'm glad we got the bastard regardless of who was in office, but I still cant stand the guy in the White House. He's still a commy.
 

dbair1967

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And it only took 10 f'king years to capture this bum on dialysis?

Not sticking up for Obama, but what the f was Bush doing all these years?

Yeah, Pakistan was really helping us out here. Telling us exactly where to look and who to talk to.
 
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And it only took 10 f'king years to capture this bum on dialysis?

Not sticking up for Obama, but what the f was Bush doing all these years?

Have you read anything about how he was living, and how he was caught?

It's not a Bush issue.

If a guy lives in a house, never leaves, never uses any form of electronic communication, is protected by the local government (who denies knowing he was a stones throw from their military academy), and communicates solely by passing messages through carriers.... we'll, how the hell are we to find them?

If one of his couriers not made a collosal mistake, and then in turn led us right to Bin Laden, then the guy very well could have lived the rest of his life in peace.
 
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