RPT-UPDATE 2-Russia to sell $29 bln state assets on market

MOSCOW, July 27 (Reuters) – Russia plans to sell $29 billion worth of assets on the open market, a senior government official said on Wednesday, allaying investors fears about the transparency of the biggest privatisation since the 1990s.

The planned asset sale is designed to fill budget holes that Russia is to battle for the next few years.

“We will sell significant stakes in state companies on the market. We plan to keep controlling stakes,” Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin told a press briefing ahead of a government meeting on Thursday, which will debate key budget parameters and privatisation plans.

“(Assets) will be valued publicly, in line with market prices and tenders will be open,” he said. “We are fully ruling out a situation when somebody sells something to someone at an artificially low price.”

He said the government wanted to earn around $10 billion next year from asset sales but did not name the companies that would be auctioned off. The government will meet on Thursday to approve draft budgets for 2011-2013 and asset sales.

If approved, the sale would become Russia’s most ambitious since President Boris Yeltsin’s era, when well-connected tycoons snapped up some of the biggest oil and metals firms at low prices.

Investors have applauded the plan to sell minority stakes in major state firms in the next three years but have said they are keen to see how transparent the process will be and whether foreigners will be allowed to bid.

The plan could help the Kremlin plug budget holes ahead of the 2012 presidential election, which will require the authorities to maintain high social spending to guarantee good approval ratings.

Sources told Reuters over the weekend the government wants to sell minority stakes in firms such as Russia’s biggest oil producer Rosneft (ROSN.MM), lender VTB (VTBR.MM) and oil pipeline monopoly Transneft (TRNF_p.MM). [ID:nLDE66P0S0]

The plan could offer the government an alternative to higher taxation in its battle to reduce budget deficits.

On Tuesday, Kudrin said Russia was unlikely to balance its budget deficit until 2015 and on Wednesday Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Russia may not be able to reduce the deficit below 5 percent — or $80 billion — this year. [ID:nLDE66R1YA]

The plan ensures Russia will keep control of the firms in a clear signal the Kremlin is not moving away from the resource nationalism it has developed over the past decade of high commodity prices.

The sales plan would undergo a final review as part of budget debates on Sept 7, and then filed to parliament.

Speaking of taxes Kudrin said the government had approved a decision to increase mineral extraction taxes on gas producers by 61 percent from next year.

For a factbox on the proposed asset sales, please click on [ID:nLDE66P1DU]

(Reporting by Gleb Bryanski, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Editing by Lidia Kelly, Ron Askew)

Italy union on attack over austerity cuts

Italy’s 24 billion euro ($30 billion) austerity plan threatens to further erode government popularity and could lead to a national strike by a big union which contends it hurts the weak and spares the rich.

The government late on Tuesday approved slashing funds to local bodies and freezing salaries for state workers, joining European peers like Spain and Portugal with spending cuts aimed at staving off contagion from the Greek crisis.

In a sign that a public backlash feared by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi could be brewing, Italy’s largest union joined smaller labour groups and the centre-left opposition in attacking the measures.

“If I’m a citizen who earns a million euros a year thanks to capital gains, I don’t shell out a single euro in the set of sacrifices,” Guglielmo Epifani, head of the CGIL union that has about 5 million members, told La Stampa daily.

“There’s no need for big words — I expected more equitable austerity measures. It doesn’t seem to me that’s the case.”

He said the union will decide on a national strike after evaluating the package, which Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is expected to present later on Wednesday.

Strikes are common in Italy, but a national strike would sharply increase the pressure on Berlusconi, who so far has shrugged off the crisis as a figment of the left’s imagination.

Italy’s other major unions, CISL and UIL, offered more muted criticism of the plan and called for more cuts to perks enjoyed by politicians to save an “economy in war”.

Berlusconi — whose popularity has flagged over a corruption scandal — has kept an unusually low profile in recent days, saying almost nothing about the budget cuts and leaving the talking to his top aides.

Italian media have reported he is unhappy with the package drawn up by Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti, fearing the cuts are too severe and will further hit sliding approval ratings.

ENCOURAGING, BUT ENOUGH?

But the plan drew praise from other quarters, including European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn, who called it “very significant”.

The Moody’s ratings agency said the package should reassure markets on Italy’s commitment to cutting deficit levels, while S&P said it should put public finances on a more sustainable footing and preserve its current ratings.

The yield spread on Italian 10-year bonds compared with the German benchmark equivalent was broadly stable on Wednesday at around 137 basis points after rises in recent days.

Analysts said the plan was an encouraging first step but probably not enough in the long run.

“We feel this should be a forerunner of a prolonged period of better fiscal management,” said Raj Badiani, of IHS Global Insight. “Italy needs to break its protracted cycle of modest growth and high debt, otherwise it will remain vulnerable to future external shocks.”

Others fretted the budget would stifle growth. With consumer morale down to its lowest level in a year, the chief of statistics agency Istat, Enrico Giovannini, warned it could undermine the chances of a recovery in consumer spending.

The cuts, amounting to about 1.6 percent of Italian GDP, are aimed at pushing the deficit below the EU’s 3 percent ceiling.

Though Italy kept its budget deficit down to 5.3 percent of GDP last year — well below the EU average — the budget aims to slash it to 2.7 percent by 2012.

In a bid to give the appearance that sacrifices will be spread evenly, the measures include pay cuts for ministers, parliamentarians and senior state-sector managers.

The plan also is expected to press regional and local governments to contribute some 13 billion euros of spending cuts in 2011-2012, almost inevitably affecting schools and hospitals. Busy arteries such as Rome’s ring road may become toll roads.

(Writing by Deepa Babington, additional reporting by Gavin Jones, Valentina Za, Giselda Vagnoni and Philip Pullella, editing by Michael Roddy)

Bush to admit to ”flaws and mistakes” in his memoir

Washington, Apr.27 (ANI): Former US President George W Bush will admit to his “flaws and mistakes” in a forthcoming memoir.

According to The Telegraph, the memoir will focus on 14 key decisions made during his eight years in office (2001-2009).

According to Crown Publishing, Decision Points, will offer “gripping, never-before-heard detail” about key events such as the disputed 2000 election, the September 11 attacks and the launch of the war on Iraq.

Aided by a former White House speech-writer Chris Michel, Bush will also reveal his decisions on the financial crisis, Hurricane Katrina, Afghanistan and Iran, as well as discussing his battle with alcohol, his discovery of faith and family relationships.

Since leaving the White House in January 2009, Bush has dedicated most of his time to the book, which will be released this autumn.

The cover features a photo of then-President Bush alone with his thoughts, standing in the Rose Garden colonnade of the White House, wearing a dark suit and holding a briefing book.

During his presidency, Bush was known for his unapologetic approach, especially regarding the Iraq War, and for taking pride in his decisiveness. He left office amid a collapsing economy and the lowest approval ratings any president has ever received since polling began. (ANI)

PREVIEW-BOJ seen pausing in its battle against deflation

(For more stories on the Japanese economy, click [ID:nECONJP])

* What: Two-day Bank of Japan policy-setting meeting

* When: Outcome expected April 7, 0330-0500 GMT

* Forecast: Rates steady at 0.1 pct, no new initiatives

By Leika Kihara

TOKYO, April 2 (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan is expected to hold fire at its policy meeting next week, but is ready to ease its ultra-loose policy further in its drawn-out battle with deflation.

Having just expanded its cheap funds scheme, the central bank will likely save its limited remaining policy options in case a spike in the yen or bond yields triggers renewed government calls for more central bank action.

The government, saddled with the biggest debt in the developed world and struggling with sliding approval ratings ahead of a midyear upper house election, has been leaning on the central bank to help the economy. Japan pulled out of its worst postwar recession nearly a year ago, but persistent declines in prices threaten to derail the recovery, hurting consumer spending and investment.

Discussions at the board will centre on whether strong factory output and improvement in business morale seen in the bank’s March tankan survey warrant an upward revision in its economic assessment. Such a revision could help defuse potential government pressure and buy the central bank more time.

The debate will serve as a basis for a more comprehensive review of the economy on April 30, when the bank issues its long-term economic and price forecasts in a semiannual report.

The BOJ board, which will have former academic Ryuzo Miyao join as a newcomer to fill one of the two vacancies, is expected to keep the policy rate unchanged at 0.1 percent. [ID:nTOE62P07R]

Here are possible outcomes:

RATES STEADY, NO NEW INITIATIVES

The BOJ has become more confident about the economic recovery with growth overshooting its forecast as companies benefit from strong exports to emerging Asia.

Its March survey supported this view, showing companies were much less pessimistic and felt less burdened by excess capacity. [ID:nTOE61E037]

The central bank may underscore such optimism by striking a more positive note on economic recovery or business sentiment.

A weakening yen and stable bond yields also offer the BOJ little justification to expand monetary easing at its next meeting. Government pressure has also subsided after its decision last month to expand fund supply to the market.

* Probability: Highly likely

* Market reaction: An upbeat economic assessment may briefly push up money market rates, although price action will be short lived as market players expect the BOJ to ease policy some time later this year.

EASE POLICY FURTHER

Despite some bright signs in the economy, few in the BOJ believe the central bank can stand pat for long with deflation hurting corporate and household spending.

Some BOJ officials say that having pledged to do its utmost to beat deflation, the central bank needs to ease policy pre-emptively before government pressure escalates again.

Consumer price declines have not slowed as much as some BOJ officials had hoped for despite improvements in the economy.

Moreover, a government decision to scrap public high school tuition fees is seen shaving around 0.5 percentage point off annual inflation, possibly reinforcing public expectations that deflation will persist.

Yen borrowing costs have fallen after the BOJ last month doubled to 20 trillion yen ($213 billion) the pool of funds available for its fixed-rate, three-month loans to banks.

The next most likely step is to expand the size of the operation further or extend the duration of fixed-rate loans to six months from three months.

Such measures may come as early as April 30 if the yen shoots up or government pressure for further easing intensifies again, but are highly unlikely next week, analysts say.

The March 17 decision to expand fund supply has pushed down the three-month yen Libor rate JPY3MFSR=, which stood at 0.24125 percent on Thursday compared with around 0.25 percent in early March.

* Probability: Unlikely

* Market reaction: The surprise timing will push down money market rates and the short end of the bond yield curve, triggering yen selling. (Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

Michelle Obama most popular US First Lady ever

Washington, April 1 (ANI): U.S. First lady Michelle Obama is more popular than her predecessors Laura Bush and Hillary Rodham Clinton were after a year in the White House.

The President’s wife’s approval ratings are blooming at 78 percent, higher than her recent predecessors at similar points in their husband”s presidency.

Comparatively, Laura Bush rated at 74 percent, and Rosalyn Carter rated at 59 percent. Hillary Clinton rated at 58 percent and Nancy Reagan at 57 percent.

Michelle has boosted her image by focusing on issues such as childhood obesity and encouraging innovative ways for kids to get exercise.

“I love the way that Mrs. Obama has stressed the simple things that people can change to make a huge difference in their lives,” CBS News quoted Katherine Tallmadge of the American Dietetic Association, as saying.

“Things like eating more vegetables. Having a garden and being more physically active.

“They may seem like simple things but study after study show they”re effective things,” Tallmadge added. (ANI)

Healthcare reform passes Congress

The US House of Representatives has given final approval to a sweeping healthcare overhaul, expanding insurance coverage to nearly all Americans and handing president Barack Obama a landmark victory.

On a hard-fought 219-212 vote, House Democrats approved the most dramatic health policy changes in 40 years. The vote sends the bill, already approved by the Senate, to Mr Obama to sign into law.

“After decades of trying and a year of sustained effort and debate, the US Congress finally declared that America’s workers, families and small businesses deserve the security of knowing that neither injury nor accident will endanger the dreams they’ve worked a lifetime to achieve,” Mr Obama said soon after the vote.

The overhaul extends insurance coverage to 32 million Americans, expands the government health plan for the poor, imposes new taxes on the wealthy and bars insurance practices such as refusing to cover people with pre-existing medical conditions.

Its passage capped a year-long political battle with Republicans that consumed the US Congress and dented Mr Obama’s approval ratings, and fulfilled a goal that eluded Democrats since former president Bill Clinton’s failed attempt in 1994.

“This isn’t radical reform, but it is major reform. This legislation will not fix everything that ails our healthcare system, but it moves us in the right direction … this is what change looks like,” Mr Obama said.

He said that despite the predictions of pundits that it was not possible to pass the mammoth bill, Americans had risen above their differences.

“Tonight we answered the call of history as so many Americans have before us. We did not avoid our responsibility. We embraced it. We did not fear our future. We shaped it.”

Democrats hugged and cheered in celebration as the vote count hit the magic number of 216 and chanted: “Yes we can.”

Every Republican opposed the bill and 34 Democrats joined them in voting against it.

Republican and industry critics said the 10-year, $US940 billion ($1.02 trillion) bill was a heavy-handed intrusion in the healthcare sector that will drive up costs, increase the budget deficit and reduce patients’ choices.

Both parties geared up for another battle over the healthcare bill in the campaign leading up to November’s congressional elections, and opponents across the country promised to challenge the legislation at the state level.

The healthcare revamp, Mr Obama’s top domestic priority, will usher in the biggest changes in America’s $US2.5 trillion healthcare system since the 1965 creation of the government-run Medicare health program for the elderly and disabled.

It would require most Americans to have health coverage, gives subsidies to help lower-income workers pay for coverage and creates state-based exchanges where the uninsured can compare and shop for plans.

Major provisions such as the exchanges and subsidies would not kick in until 2014, but many of the insurance reforms like barring companies from dropping coverage for the sick will begin in the first year.

Heavy lobbying

The vote followed days of heavy lobbying of undecided House Democrats by Mr Obama, his top aides and House leaders.

The narrow victory was clinched by a deal designed to appease a handful of Democratic opponents of abortion rights.

Under the deal, Mr Obama will issue an executive order affirming government restrictions on the use of federal funds for abortion.

That pledge won the support of Representative Bart Stupak and a handful of other House Democratic abortion rights opponents, who had threatened to vote against the Senate-passed bill because they said its abortion restrictions were not strong enough.

The health insurance industry has vigorously opposed the plan, but insurance stocks rallied late last week as investors began to realise their worst fears had not materialised.

Pharmaceutical companies, hospitals and others will benefit from more insured patients, and the bill does not allow the government to cap prices and premiums, which would have hurt drugmakers and insurers.

Opinion polls show the public also has a mixed view. While pluralities oppose the legislation and the process has turned off many Americans, some of the bill’s individual components draw heavy support.

- Reuters

Silvio Berlusconi’s kids stand by him in ‘Papi’ row

London, May 28 (ANI): The scandal surrounding Silvio Berlusconi’s friendship with an 18-year-old aspiring model has started a new guessing game in Italy over its authenticity. His wife, however, is not happy with the news and has, infact, announced intentions of divorcing him in a newspaper.

But, Berlusconi is not alone. His kids are standing by him.

The Italian Prime minister’s failure to explain his friendship with Noemi Letizia has hit his normally sky-high approval ratings, according to private polls.

As he prepared to mount a television campaign to boost his flagging popularity, Berlusconi was stung by an opposition leader who questioned his family values, reports The Times.

Dario Franceschini, the leader of the Democratic Party, said: “To the Italians, I want to ask a question: would you want your children brought up by this man?”

Marina Berlusconi, the Prime Minister’s oldest child and an executive in his media empire, retorted: “I would be thrilled for Franceschini’s children if they had a father like mine.”

Barbara, Eleonora and Luigi – the children from Berlusconi’s second marriage – also stood by their father.

“We were brought up in a sensible family environment rich in values,” they said.

Meanwhile, Letizia had earlier claimed that Berlusconi would launch her into a career in politics.

Letizia, who affectionately calls Berlusconi “Papi”, came under media glare after Veronica Lario, the Italian leader’s wife, announced their divorce with the words, “I cannot be with a man who spends time with under-age women”.

The buzz started that Belusconi had attended the teenager’s 18th birthday party, presenting her with a gold and diamond necklace.

However, in an earlier interview, Letizia denied having an “inappropriate relationship” with Berlusconi. (ANI)

Obama’s approval ratings down by five percentage points since April

Washington, may 14 (ANI): US President Barack Obama’s approval ratings stand at 63 percent, down 5 percentage points from last month, according to a CBS poll.

The percentage of Americans who say the country is heading in the right direction, though, continues to inch up.

Currently, 45 percent of Americans agree with that sentiment, which is four points higher than last month and the highest that figure has been since December 2003, shortly after the capture of Saddam Hussein.

Correspondingly, 48 percent of Americans say the country is headed in the wrong direction, down from 50 percent in April and 68 percent in February.

The public’s outlook for the economy is also improving. Thirty-two percent of Americans think the economy is getting better, which is the most optimistic economic outlook in the United States since February 2004, according to the poll.

Still, 42 percent of Americans expect the economic recession to last another two years or more. Another 39 percent think it will last one more year, while one in 10 Americans expects the recession to last another six months.

The percentage of Americans who approve of the way Obama is handling the economy has decreased slightly from 61 percent in March and April to 56 percent.

This poll was conducted among a random sample of 1,874 adults nationwide, interviewed by telephone May 6-12, 2009. Phone numbers were dialed from RDD samples of both standard land-lines and cell phones. The error due to sampling for results based on the entire sample could be plus or minus two percentage points. The error for subgroups is higher. (ANI)

Four in five US Jews unwavering in their support for Obama: Gallup Poll

New York, May 3 (ANI): Despite fierce op-ed page debates over the Obama administration’s actions so far on Israel, Iran and the Middle East, American Jews are unwavering in their support of the new president, according to a new Gallup poll.

Tracking polls conducted through Obama’s first 100 days in office show that 79 percent of Jews approve of Obama’s performance so far, about the same percentage that voted for him last November, reports The Jerusalem Post.

Only Muslims gave Obama higher approval ratings, with 85 percent responding that they approve of the president. Respondents who identified themselves as non-religious also indicated overwhelming support, with 73 percent indicating approval.

Liberal Jews showed overwhelming support for the Democratic president, with 96 percent approving of his job performance. Among those who described themselves as moderate, 77 percent approved of Obama.

Jewish conservatives split evenly, with 45 percent approving of Obama and 45 percent disapproving.

The poll’s authors noted that Obama has taken a strong stand on the Middle East by appointing George Mitchell as a special peace envoy and dispatching Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the region. The new administration has also signaled shifts in their approach to Iran’s nuclear program.

“It is not clear whether US Jews endorse Obama’s approach, but the fact that four in five approve of the job he is doing – consistent with their vote for him in the election – suggests they at least tolerate it,” they wrote. (ANI)

Appeals filed over kiss-and-tell book on Finnish premier

Helsinki – A kiss-and-tell book about Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen and the related issue of how much privacy leading politicians can claim may feature in a new trial, reports said Wednesday.

The prosecutor as well as the author and publisher of the book have filed appeals to the Supreme Court. A decision on a possible hearing is expected in four months, Finnish news agency STT reported.

An appeal court in February said the book violated Vanhanen’s privacy and ordered publisher Kari Ojala and author Susan Ruusunen, whom Vanhanen once dated, to pay fines based on the book earnings.

Ruusunen’s book Paaministerin morsian (The Prime Minister’s Bride) was published in 2007 after the relationship had ended. The two – both divorced – met via an internet dating site in 2006.

Last month, Vanhanen announced his engagement to Sirkka Mertala. The couple have been dating for a year.

In a related development, a new survey published Wednesday suggested Vanhanen’s approval ratings have dropped to their lowest level since he became prime minister almost six years ago.

Only 32 per cent of the 943 voters polled early April said they were satisfied with Vanhanen’s leadership, according to the survey commissioned by the newspaper Kaleva.

The controversy over the Ruusunen book was one factor that hit Vanhanen’s ratings, but the economic downturn was the main factor. The government’s overall ratings were also hit by the financial crisis, the survey said. (dpa)

Malaysia’s new cabinet sworn in

Kuala Lumpur – Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s new cabinet of 28 ministers and 40 deputy ministers was sworn in Friday before Malaysia’s king at the royal palace. The new cabinet is slightly smaller than the previous 31 ministers under Najib’s predecessor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and consists of many first timers.

Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who was also appointed as the education minister, led the newly appointed ministers and deputy ministers in taking their oaths of office before King Mizan Zainal Abidin, the official Bernama news agency reported.

In announcing the new lineup, Najib, 56, who took office April 3 pledged to carry out wide-ranging administrative and social reforms that Abdullah had also promised but largely failed to carry out.

The ruling National Front coalition is suffering from its worst public approval ratings in decades as proven by its humiliating losses in last year’s general elections.

The front lost its two-thirds majority in Parliament and an unprecedented five out of 13 states to the opposition. (dpa)

Obama aides admit presentational errors making him less popular

Washington, Mar. 15 (ANI): Aides of President Obama have candidly admitted that presentational errors during the previous seven weeks are contributing to his deteriorating popularity.

They realize that returning the bust of Winston Churchill to British Government and gifting British PM Gordon Brown with a set of 25 DVDs as a state gift was “a mistake.”

“Clearly it was a mistake, and they want people to know that they know that. There is a collective desire to learn from the experience. They pride themselves on attention to detail. They didn’t have their eye on the ball… they all know they’ve got to do better,” The Telegraph quoted a White House aide, as saying.

Obama has instructed White House staff to not repeat the mistakes.

A top White House sourse told The Telegraph that Obama has now told his staff to learn from the errors made during Brown’s visit and to ensure that the protocol is observed when he meets the Queen later this month.

Administration officials have been warned to be better prepared for the high profile series of international meetings over the next few weeks, during which Obama will travel to Europe for the G20 meeting in London, roll out a new strategy for Afghanistan at a NATO’s summit and make his first visit to a Muslim nation – Turkey.

Obama is due to call at Buckingham Palace shortly before the G20 meeting.

A new poll has revealed that Obama’s personal approval ratings have dipped to levels below those of George W. Bush at the same stage of his first term, undermining the common assumption that Obama is enjoying unusual levels of public popularity. (ANI)

American public still thinks highly of Obama

Washington, Feb.15 (ANI): President Barack Obama’s approval rating still remains well above 60 percent in tracking polls.

According to Politico, most state pollsters are saying that they have not seen any diminution in Obama’s sky-high approval ratings, and no improvement in congressional Republicans’ dismal numbers.

And that’s before the stimulus creates billions of dollars in spending on popular programs, which could, at least temporarily, further boost Obama’s popularity.

With the stimulus safely passed, Obama’s aides are saying that they are relying on the steady support of a populace that, after a closely watched election, is tuning out the Washington cut and thrust.

“You shouldn’t judge his success in reaching out by the vote count in either chamber of Congress – you’ve really got to judge it based more on what people in the country are thinking and saying,” said John Del Cecato, a media adviser to Obama’s campaign and former partner of Obama aide David Axelrod.

“If you look at any number of public polls, and private polls support this, it’s not just Democrats and independents who support the way he’s gone about advancing the stimulus plan – it’s a certain amount of Republicans too.”

A CBS News poll released February 5, for instance, found 81 percent of Americans said Obama is reaching out to congressional Republicans, while just 41 percent said the congressional Republicans were looking for bipartisanship.

“There have been a number of different surveys that have shown that Americans perceive that Obama is extending a hand of cooperation, a hand that the Republican leadership is not reciprocating – that’s very striking in the data,” said Mark Blumenthal, the editor of Pollster.com, who also noted that Obama has managed to remain popular even with some Republicans. (ANI)

Bush leaves presidency with ‘lowest in history’ 22 percent approval ratings

New York, Jan 17 (ANI): Only 22 percent of Americans have said they approved President George W Bush’s performance over the last eight years, as he prepares to leave office, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

The public opinion toward him shows no softening in stance with 73 percent respondents disapproved of his performance over the course of his two terms.

Disapproval cut across party lines, with Democrats, independents and even 34 percent of Republicans critical of Bush’s performance, The NYT reported.

In contrast, Bush’s most recent predecessors left office with approval ratings ranging from 68 percent, for both Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton, to 44 percent, for Jimmy Carter. Bush’s father left with 54 percent approval ratings.

When asked to assess Bush’s presidency more precisely, just 17 percent of those surveyed rated it very good or good, while 83 percent said it had been average or poor.

Fifty-nine percent of Americans regarded Clinton’s presidency as very good or good when he left office, and 40 percent viewed the presidency of the elder Mr. Bush the same way.

The public’s assessment of the president’s handling of both the economy and the war in Iraq was markedly negative. Seventy-seven percent disapproved of Bush’s management of the economy, and 71 percent faulted his handling of the war.

In surveys that began with Gallup polling in the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bush has the distinction of being the president with both the highest and lowest approval ratings. The highest, 90 percent, was recorded shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

The campaign against terrorism is one area in which he continues to win a measure of support from the public, with 47 percent approving of his handling of the issue and 48 percent disapproving.

Republicans were particularly supportive of him on the subject of terrorism: 87 percent approved of his administration’s actions to fight it. (ANI)