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Just 58 percent of the 1,002 adults polled approved of Bush's job performance, down from 63 percent a month ago.
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WASHINGTON,
January 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – U.S. President George
W. Bush's popularity has slipped to its lowest level since the September
11, 2001, attacks, amid a struggling economy and public fears of
conflict with Iraq and North Korea, according to a poll released Monday,
January 13.
Just
58 percent of the 1,002 adults questioned for the CNN/USA Today/Gallup
poll approved of Bush's job performance, down from 63 percent a month
ago, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Bush's
approval rating was higher than those of former Presidents Jimmy Carter,
Ronald Reagan or Bill Clinton at the start of their third years in
office, but a significant drop from the 90 percent support he enjoyed
just after the deadly attacks by hijacked airliners.
The
poll also showed a drop in the share of Americans who approve of his
handling of both the economy - 48 percent versus 49 percent in October -
and foreign affairs - 53 percent versus 58 percent in October.
Some
55 percent said Bush was not paying enough attention to the economy,
versus 41 percent who said he was paying the right amount of attention
and two percent who said he was paying too much attention.
On
Iraq, the percentage favoring a U.S. invasion edged up slightly to 56
percent from 55 percent a month ago.
The
poll, taken Friday through Sunday, had a margin of error of plus or
minus three percentage points.
Anti-War
Activists Speak Louder
On
Monday, a group of American academics who oppose a war with Iraq began a
fact-finding and humanitarian mission in Baghdad, saying a conflict was
illegal and unnecessary.
"U.S.
Academics Against the War" sent 35 people from 28 universities
across the United States to Iraq after 30,000 teachers signed a petition
to try to persuade President George W. Bush not to unleash a war.
"We
have come here to establish dialogue, to do a fact-finding mission, to
represent the humanitarian aspect of the American public, because we
have concern for the people here, for the families, for the children who
are going to suffer during any future war," said coordinator James
Jennings.
"We
oppose a war, we think that it constitutes aggression, it is contrary to
international law, it will do great damage to the infrastructure and to
the people and to the country, it is unwarranted, unnecessary, unwise,
it is contrary to the deepest values of the American constitution."
The
group, which arrived Sunday night, visited a children's hospital in
Baghdad and the capital's Amariya air shelter where some 400 civilians
perished during a US aerial bombardment in February 1991, at the height
of the Gulf War. At the time, U.S. officials said they believed the site
was an Iraqi military command centre.
The
Washington Post reported Monday that many anti-war activists have
arrived in Baghdad in recent days to "plead for a peaceful solution
to the showdown between the Bush administration an President Saddam
Hussein's government."
According
to the paper, these activists include "Italian legislators, South
African Muslims, German musicians and a flurry of Americans, from church
leaders and professors to four women who lost relatives in the Sept. 11,
2001, terror attacks."
"Most
of the activists have not waited to return before beginning their
lobbying efforts. With the encouragement and sometimes the assistance of
their Iraqi hosts, they have sought out foreign journalists through news
conferences and photo opportunities," said the Post.