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Showing posts with label CNN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CNN. Show all posts

Thursday, February 10, 2011

CNN Poll Says Obama Will Not Win Re-Election

President Barack Obama and Vice President Jose...Image via Wikipedia
Roughly 51 percent of Americans expect President Obama to lose his 2012 re-election bid, a new CNN/ Opinion Research Corporation poll has found. Fewer -- 46 percent -- said they expect the president to win re-election.

While that seems like bad news, it's important to consider this bit of context: When the same question was asked in 1995, 65 percent of Americans expected President Bill Clinton to lose his re-election bid, and just 24 percent said he would win. Mr. Clinton, of course, went on to win a second term. CONTINUE....

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

TV's Golden Age of Rage


O'Reilly, Hannity, Olbermann and the rise of white rage on cable television.

By: Cord Jefferson

This is the modern face of cable television news: angry, emotional, mouth agape in the midst of some hateful monologue. Oh, and in case you hadn't noticed, the worst purveyors of cable news rage are all white men over 40. The era of the angry white man is officially here.

TV's Golden Age of Rage....

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

CNN POLL: AMERICA READY FOR BLACK PRESIDENT



A new CNN poll finds seventy-two percent of white Americans and 61 percent of black Americans believe the nation is ready for a black president.

According to CNN.com, that number is higher than it was in 2006, when 65 percent of whites and 54 percent of blacks felt the same way. It's also higher than the proportion of either men or women -- 64 percent and 65 percent, respectively -- who currently believe the nation is ready for a woman in the White House.


Forty years after Martin Luther King Jr.'s death, roughly four in 10 individuals in both groups say that the country has fulfilled all, or at least a great deal, of King's dream. However, they have different views on whether it will ever be fully realized in the United States.


When asked whether race relations will always pose a problem in the United States, about half of black Americans, 52 percent, said yes -- and just 43 percent of whites shared that view. When posed the same question in 1993, 55 percent of blacks and 53 percent of whites thought race relations would always be a problem for the United States.

The top six concerns for both whites and blacks in making their presidential choice this year are exactly the same in the following order -- the economy, Iraq, terrorism, health care, gas prices and Iran -- though blacks place a higher level of importance on all those issues.

• The CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll was released Monday and includes interviews with 1,393 adult Americans, including 743 whites and 513 blacks. It was conducted by telephone January 14-17 and has a sampling error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.