Thursday, November 02, 2006

Iraq is the issue.



Putz can blather on and on about Kerry until hell freezes over (4 posts already today), but Iraq is still the issue, and has always been the issue of this election.
A substantial majority of Americans expect Democrats to reduce or end American military involvement in Iraq if they win control of Congress next Tuesday and say Republicans will maintain or increase troop levels to try to win the war if they hold on to power on Capitol Hill, according to the final New York Times/CBS News poll before the midterm election.

The poll showed that 29 percent of Americans approve of the way President Bush is managing the war, matching the lowest mark of his presidency. Nearly 70 percent said Mr. Bush did not have a plan to end the war, and 80 percent said Mr. Bush’s latest effort to rally public support for the conflict amounted to a change in language but not policy.

And Bush has just made things even worse for the GOP's chances by endorsing the architect of the fiasco in Iraq, Donald Rumsfeld.

President Bush said Wednesday he wants Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Vice President Dick Cheney to remain in his administration until the end of his presidency, extending a job guarantee to two of the most criticized members of his team.

That's a problem, George, because people want you to change.
Americans cited Iraq as the most important issue affecting their vote, and majorities of Republicans and Democrats said they wanted a change in approach. Twenty percent said they thought the United States was winning in Iraq, down from a high this year of 36 percent in January.
That 20% apparently includes the ever-delusional Putz, who believes that the manufactured Kerry incident is going to save his beloved GOP.

Sorry Putz. Not gonna happen.

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