53% of Americans Polls Say Bush Should Be Impeached

November 6th, 2005 - by admin

AfterDowningStreet.org – 2005-11-06 09:04:54

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New Poll Shows Majority of Americans Support Impeachment

By a margin of 53% to 42%, Americans want Congress to impeach President Bush if he lied about the war in Iraq, according to a new poll commissioned by AfterDowningStreet.org, a grassroots coalition that supports a Congressional investigation of President Bush’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003.

The poll was conducted by Zogby International, the highly-regarded non-partisan polling company. The poll interviewed 1,200 U.S. adults from October 29 through November 2.

The poll found that 53% agreed with the statement:

“If President Bush did not tell the truth about his reasons for going to war with Iraq, Congress should consider holding him accountable through impeachment.”

42% disagreed, and 5% said they didn’t know or declined to answer. The poll has a +/- 2.9% margin of error.

“These results are stunning,” said AfterDowningStreet.org co-founder Bob Fertik. “A clear majority of Americans now supports President Bush’s impeachment if he lied about the war. This should send shock waves through the White House – and a wake-up call to Democrats and Republicans in Congress, who have sole power under the Constitution to impeach President Bush.”

ImpeachPAC is Launched
In response to the latest poll results, Bob Fertik, president of Democrats.com, announced today the creation of a new political action committee called ImpeachPAC, headquartered at ImpeachPAC.org. ImpeachPAC will support Democratic candidates who support the immediate and simultaneous impeachment of George Bush and Dick Cheney for lying about Iraq. ImpeachPAC set a goal of raising $100,000 over the Internet to prove to President Bush, Congress, and the media that there is intense grassroots support for impeachment, as reflected in the new Zogby poll.

Impeachment Supported by Majorities of Many Groups

Responses to the Zogby poll varied by political party affiliation: 76% of Democrats favored impeachment, compared to 50% of Independents and 29% of Republicans.

Responses also varied by age, sex, race, and religion. 70% of those 18-29 favored impeachment, 51% of those 31-49, 50% of those 50-64, and 42% of those over 65. 56% of women favored impeachment, compared to 49% of men. Among African Americans, 90% favored impeachment, compared to 67% of Hispanics, and 46% of whites. Majorities of Catholics, Jews, Muslims, and Others favored impeachment, while 49% of Protestants and 46% of Born Again Christians did so.

Majorities favored impeachment in the East (53%), West (56%), and Central states (58%), but not the South (43%). In large cities, 58% support impeachment; in small cities, 56%; in suburbs, 49%; in rural areas, 46%.

Support for Impeachment Has Surged Since June
The new Zogby poll shows a dramatic transformation in support for Bush’s impeachment since late June. (This is only the third poll that has asked Americans about their support for impeaching Bush in 2005, despite his record-low approval ratings.)

The Zogby poll conducted June 27-29 of 905 likely voters found that 42% agreed and 50% disagreed with the identical statement asked about in this recent polling. This question was virtually identical to one used in early October by Ipsos Public Affairs, which found that 50% agreed and 44% disagreed that Congress should consider impeaching Bush if he did not tell the truth about his reasons for war.

After the June poll, pollster John Zogby told the Washington Post that support for impeachment “was much higher than I expected.” At the time, impeachment supporters trailed opponents by 8%. Now supporters outnumber opponents by 11%, a remarkable shift of 19%.

If impeachment support continues to grow by 3% each month, it will reach 60% in January, 65% in March, and 70% in April.

Support for Clinton Impeachment Was Much Lower
In August and September of 1998, 16 major polls asked about impeaching President Clinton.

Only 36% supported hearings to consider impeachment, and only 26% supported actual impeachment and removal. Even so, the impeachment debate dominated the news for months, and the Republican Congress impeached Clinton despite overwhelming public opposition.

Impeachment Support is Closely Related
To Belief that Bush Lied about Iraq

The Zogby and Ipsos polls asked about support for impeachment if Bush lied about the reasons for war, rather than asking simply about support for impeachment. Pollsters predict that asking simply about impeachment without any context would produce a large number of “I don’t know” responses.

However, this may understate those who support Bush’s impeachment for other reasons, such as his actions before and immediately after Hurricane Katrina, his negligence prior to 9-11, his use of torture, and the CIA outing scandal.

Other polls show a majority of U.S. adults believe that Bush did in fact lie about the reasons for war. A June 23-26 ABC/Washington Post poll found 52% of Americans believe the Bush administration “deliberately misled the public before the war,” and 57% say the Bush administration “intentionally exaggerated its evidence that pre-war Iraq possessed nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.”

Support for the war has dropped significantly since June, which suggests that the percentage of Americans who believe Bush lied about the war has increased.

Passion for Impeachment is Major Unreported Story
The strong support for impeachment found in this poll is especially surprising because the views of impeachment supporters are entirely absent from the broadcast and print media, and can only be found on the Internet and in street protests.

The lack of coverage of impeachment support is due in part to the fact that not a single Democrat in Congress has called for impeachment, despite considerable grassroots activism by groups like Democrats.com (http://democrats.com/impeach).

The passion of impeachment supporters is directly responsible for the new poll commissioned by After Downing Street. After the Zogby poll in June, activists led by Democrats.com urged all of the major polling organizations to include an impeachment question in their upcoming polls. But none of the polling organizations were willing to do so for free, so on September 30, AfterDowningStreet.org posted a request for donations to fund paid polls (http://afterdowningstreet.org/polling).

People responded with small donations (on average $27) which quickly added up to over $10,000. After Downing Street has spent a portion of that money on the Ipsos Poll and the new Zogby Poll.

Footnotes:
• 1. AfterDowningStreet.org is a rapidly growing coalition of veterans’ groups, peace groups, and political activist groups that was created on May 26, 2005, following the publication of the Downing Street Memo in London’s Sunday Times on May 1. The coalition is urging Congress to begin a formal investigation into whether President Bush committed impeachable offenses in connection with the Iraq war.

• 2. The Ipsos Public Affairs poll and the new Zogby poll results cited above refer to surveys of US adults. The June Zogby results are from a survey of likely voters. The new Zogby poll produced results for both adults and likely voters (see footnote 3).

mpeachPAC
PO Box 721066, Jackson Heights, NY 11372


Democrats Standing Firm Against Treason
Hon. John Conyers Jr.

Returning from the Rosa Parks memorial ceremony in Detroit this week, I have been encouraged by the principled stands that many of my Democratic colleagues have taken.

Earlier this week, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid invoked a rarely used parliamentary procedure to demand on the Senate floor that Republicans provide answers to questions about the administration’s use of pre-war intelligence.

When Senate Republicans were confronted with the need to come clean with the American people and put our nation’s security ahead of propping up a sinking administration, you would have thought someone took away their pacifiers.

DCCC Video:
“Never have I been slapped in the face with such an affront to the leadership of this grand institution.” — Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist

Sorry, Senator Frist, but having to face questions about why we are fighting a war based on flawed intelligence is not an affront, it’s your job. It’s disappointing that you consider this responsibility such a burden.

This week, joined by my House colleagues Henry Waxman and Maurice Hinchey, I called on Vice President Cheney to testify before Congress. In the 1970s, Cheney served as Deputy Chief of Staff to President Gerald Ford who agreed to appear before Congress to explain his reasons for pardoning President Nixon.

While I am not expecting a speedy answer from the Vice President, I believe the country deserves to hear his reasons for outing a covert agent and undermining our intelligence community.

I would be remiss if I did not highlight a principled Republican standing up to speak the truth. Former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell, Larry Wilkerson, attracted a lot of attention when he chose to speak publicly about a cabal led by Cheney and Rumsfeld co-opting our national security policy for their own purposes.

What was perhaps most illuminating was Wilkerson’s interview on NPR’s Morning Edition yesterday when he explained that Cheney himself directed the policy of detainee abuse in Abu Ghraib. How was Wilkerson so sure? Because Cheney asked him to collect all the documents and records of communications within the administration on this issue. I wonder where those documents are now?

The DCCC has also been engaged in some creative work following the Libby indictments. They have produced a short video [see inset] that includes clips of many of the promises Republicans made to get to the bottom of the Valerie Plame leak.

This piece includes the Bush Sr. declaration that the lowest form of treason is revealing a spy, the current president’s promises to fire anyone involved in the leak, and former RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie affirming that this was worse than Watergate.

I will be posting this email on my blog, http://conyersblog.us and would encourage any of you to come to this site and post any comments you may have. I will be checking in periodically throughout the weekend to respond to postings.

Thank you for your help and your continued stand for a better democracy.

Conyers for Congress.