Well, we all "know' why Bush is doing this, but it's interesting (to me, anyway) to see the data anyway. It's also interesting to see how they may be shooting themselves in the foot.
The Pew Research Center released this polling data yesterday. Scroll down to the third box on the right-hand side -- the one labelled "Decline in Bush Support Widespread." Now check out which demographic group has manifested the single biggest decline in Bush support since December 2004. Yup: White Protestant Evangelicals -- a 22% drop, to 55%.
But now scroll up to the second box, the graph labelled "Bush Job Approval Among Republicans," and look at the numbers for moderates: 56%.
In other words, Bush's approval rating has tanked to the same level with evangelicals and moderates, and his grand scheme for dealing with this is to champion a hopeless idea that, while it appeals to evangelicals, will actually alienates moderates even further.
Of course, there are more evangelicals than moderates in the GOP. But the seats the GOP stands to lose are largely in places where moderates, not evangelicals, matter.
The Pew Research Center released this polling data yesterday. Scroll down to the third box on the right-hand side -- the one labelled "Decline in Bush Support Widespread." Now check out which demographic group has manifested the single biggest decline in Bush support since December 2004. Yup: White Protestant Evangelicals -- a 22% drop, to 55%.
But now scroll up to the second box, the graph labelled "Bush Job Approval Among Republicans," and look at the numbers for moderates: 56%.
In other words, Bush's approval rating has tanked to the same level with evangelicals and moderates, and his grand scheme for dealing with this is to champion a hopeless idea that, while it appeals to evangelicals, will actually alienates moderates even further.
Of course, there are more evangelicals than moderates in the GOP. But the seats the GOP stands to lose are largely in places where moderates, not evangelicals, matter.
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