Osama death boosts Obama popularity

Print
PDF
US president's sagging approval ratings improve by nine points following al-Qaeda chief's killing, surveys show

Obama's ratings have gone up but Americans are still unhappy about the state of the economy  [White House]

After being on the decline for a while, US president's popularity has got a strong boost following the killing of Osama bin Laden.
Two surveys, conducted a day after US forces tracked down and killed the al-Qaeda chief in a hideout in Pakistan, found Barack Obama's approval ratings at 56 per cent - a 9-point improvement over last month.
The results released on Tuesday were reported by The Washington Post/Pew Research Center and USA Today/Gallup Poll.
While the killing of bin Laden seized world attention, such events can prove short-lived, particularly after a brutal presidential campaign.
But Republicans lining up to challenge Obama in nexy year's election will be banking on pressing domestic issues to turn the tables on him.
The Washington Post/Pew Research Center poll showed that only 40 per cent of those surveyed approved of the president's handling of the economy.
Other polls last week found that about 70 per cent of Americans felt the country was on the wrong track.Even though the economy is slowly recovering from the Great Recession, unemployment remains near 9 per cent and gasoline prices have shot up.

While Obama has received generally broad bipartisan and international backing for the killing of bin Laden, Americans at the same time report increased fears about retaliatory al-Qaeda attacks.

The USA Today/Gallup Poll survey found that more than six in 10 of those contacted said a reprisal attack was likely in the coming weeks. That, the pollsters said, was "the highest rate of public nervousness in eight years".

The polls surveyed randomly selected adults by telephone on May 2 and have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus five percentage points.

Comments

Name *
Code   
The editors have decided not to pre-select comments from readers. Nonetheless they underline that the sole owners and responsible of the comments are the authors themselves whose opinions they represent and that under no circumstances dirittiglobali.it could be held responsible for any offensive comments to the rights of others. The editors point out that are not allowed and will be immediately removed:
- Messages not related to the topic of the article
- Messages offensive to anyone
- Messages with racist or sexist content
- Messages that constitutes a violation of present laws
(incitement to crime or violence, defamation, etc.).
Submit Comment

Our Editorial


Here you can read all our editorials, just press the Title
AKP, Arresting the right to make politics, by Orsola Casagrande
ICG: Kurdish question would be solved through dialogue not war, by Orsola Casagrande

Who's Online

Now online:
  • no members
  • 2 guests
  • 4 robots
Latest members:
  • Grepulaaval
  • GuesTestFr
  • alexpril
  • Attisyicopy
  • JupFrurnJania

Statistics

Members : 1053
Content : 2899
Content View Hits : 1833331

Disclaimer

This website is indeed a blog and not an online newspaper. It has no commercial aim and access is completely free. Some of the pictures that we publish are taken from the internet, as well as some articles and news; should their use violates copyrights, please do inform us and we will immediately remove them from the site.

Every published article in this site clearly states author and source. The site www.globalrights.info does not necessarily shares and agrees with the content and opinion of what is published and comes from other sources and media, and therefore takes no responsibility about it.
Comments by the readers are to be attributed solely to the readers themselves who are therefore fully responsible for what they write. www.globalrights.info takes no responsibility over comments by the readers.