Word: polle
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...NOTE: Poll results are not scientific and reflect the opinions of only those users who chose to participate. Poll results are not reflected in real time...
...years have concluded that the average American office worker "goofs off" for just over two hours a day--and that's not counting lunches or breaks. One hundred twenty-six minutes a day, to be exact. What do we do with this stolen time? "Spacing out" is a common poll response. Gossiping with co-workers is obviously popular. Surfing the Internet tops them...
...question is how the public views the Iraq debate. Polls suggest that a large majority of Americans now view the war as as mistake, but they're conflicted about whether troops should return home quickly or stay as long as they need to be there for Iraqi security. Republicans seem to be betting that they can use the Democrats' eagerness to get out of Iraq as an election issue, reinforcing public doubts about the party's record on national security issues. But that's a risky strategy, since the war is what has dragged down the poll numbers of both...
...Florida Governor Jeb Bush often like to whisper that he, not George W., was the brother who should have been President. Jeb, they insist, is the smart one, and the more genuine conservative. So they felt especially smug last month when President Bush, on the same day his poll numbers plunged to 31%, visited Florida to tout his Medicare prescription plan with the help of Jeb, whose own numbers have hovered in the mid-50s since he took office in 1999. Descending Air Force One, the President playfully straightened Jeb's necktie on the Tampa tarmac - and then spent much...
...this conference, Clinton is far ahead of Kerry in the early positioning for the 2008 nomination. Not only has she raised millions for her 2006 reelection effort that she could transfer to a presidential campaign fund, but she is still beloved by many in her party. In a Gallup poll earlier this month, 36% of registered Democratic voters said they would support her in a presidential campaign, compared to 11% for Kerry. (John Edwards got 12% and Al Gore 16%.) What's more, national polls show her problem with most voters is that they find her too liberal...