59% Would Vote to Replace Entire Congress

dicktater's picture

This is big news!

However, coverage by the mainstream media of this incredible Rasmussen poll, released just one week ago, has been totally non-existent. In fact, a google web search of the exact title of the Rasmussen press release yielded only 18 hits. A search of google news returned absolutely nothing, nada, zilch, zally, zip, nada.

It is one thing to see high disapproval numbers, particularly if a poll is conducted while the news is giving coverage to specific criminal activity of CONgress. However, it is another thing to see such a large percentage apparently willing to give CONgress the bum's rush given the desire by most is to keep or return power to their party. 24% in this survey seem to have been on the fence seven days ago. I'll bet that number has shrunk dramatically by now with the percentage of gluttons for punishment taking a hit. Anyone care to wager the percentage of restless, pesky peasants hasn't grown given the events of the past week? Someone with the bucks should commission a new poll.

59% Would Vote to Replace Entire Congress
rasmussenreports.com
Sunday, October 05, 2008
Congress was front and center in the national news last week and the American people were far from impressed. If they could vote to keep or replace the entire Congress, 59% of voters would like to throw them all out and start over again. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that just 17% would vote to keep the current legislators in office.

Today, just 23% have even a little confidence in the ability of Congress to deal with the nation’s economic problems and only 24% believe most Members of Congress understand legislation before they vote on it.

Last week, the House of Representatives initially rejected a financial bailout bill proposed by the Bush Administration. Later, after the Senate added a number of items that some call “pork” and others call “sweeteners,” the measure eventually passed. While the bill survived Washington, it did so at a time when just 30% of voters favored it and 45% were opposed.

Only half (49%) believe that the current Congress is better than individuals selected at random from the phone book. Thirty-three percent (33%) believe a randomly selected group of Americans could do a better job and 19% are not sure (see crosstabs).

A separate survey found that just 11% of voters say Congress is doing a good or an excellent job. (see crosstabs and recent trends).

Despite these reviews, more than 90% of Congress is likely to be elected this November due to an electoral system designed to benefit incumbents. The biggest advantage offered those in the House of Representatives is a process known as Gerrymandering where Congressional Districts are loaded with friendly voters from Representative’s own party. In effect, Members of Congress—working through their state legislature--get to choose their voters rather than letting voters choose their Congressman.

Also aiding incumbents is high name recognition from news coverage, large staffs funded by taxpayers, and other perks. While the staff positions are technically excluded from politics, the constituent services they provide in a Congressman’s name are among the most effective of all campaign techniques.

Forty-nine percent (49%) of all voters believe Members of Congress are paid too much while just 5% believe they are paid too little. Thirty-seven percent (37%) say Congressional pay is about right.

While unhappiness with Congress cuts across partisan and demographic lines, Democrats are a bit less unhappy than other voters. Seventy-four percent (74%) of Republicans would vote to throw out the entire Congress as would 62% of unaffiliated voters. Only 43% of Democrats go along. Still, just 25% of those in Barack Obama’s party would vote to keep the entire Congress even though it’s controlled by Democrats.

However, there is agreement across party lines when it comes to whether or not most Members of Congress understand legislation before they vote on it—25% of Democrats say yes along with 24% of Republicans and 24% of unaffiliated voters.

Democrats currently enjoy a nine-point advantage in the Generic Congressional Ballot.

When the Constitution was written, the nation’s founders expected that there would be a 50% turnover in the House of Representatives every election cycle. That was the experience they witnessed in state legislatures at the time (and most of the state legislatures offered just one-year terms). For well over 100 years after the Constitution was adopted, the turnover averaged in the 50% range as expected.

In the twentieth century, turnover began to decline. As power and prestige flowed to Washington during the New Deal era, fewer and fewer Members of Congress wanted to leave. In 1968, Congressional turnover fell to single digits for the first time ever and it has remained very low ever since.

See survey questions and toplines. Crosstabs available for Premium Members only.

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E Vero's picture

Mr Tater:

You posted a while back a compilation of congress-critters and their yes or no vote on the bailout bill. I would love to see a list of congress-critters with their position on whether or not they endorse the official gov't conspiracy theory about 9/11. Any ideas how that could come about? And don't somewhere around 50% of Americans doubt the official 9/11 myth?

E

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"It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there."

--William Carlos Williams (from the poem 'From')

dicktater's picture

Hi E Verocity

I don't know of any compilation of CONgresscritters who support the 9/11 OTC. Probaly fear of being Wellstoned keeps the list whereby they could probably be counted on one hand. I am not aware of a list of those who don't. Hell, I don't even know for sure what Kucinich thinks.

I guess the first question could be answered by looking at who may be listed here:

http://patriotsquestion911.com/

There was a Zogby poll from May 22, 2006 that indicated 51% wanted a new investigation. I don't know of any more recent polls other than the global poll of 9/11/2008, though.

"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen