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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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01238900.049
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1990-09-17
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NATION, Page 18XZ
Bush's Lukewarm Welcome
First Impressions. Just 50% of the public has a favorable
impression of Bush, vs. 21% with an unfavorable perception and 29%
uncertain. Quayle still runs a deficit on this score: 20%
favorable, 30% unfavorable and 50% with no opinion. More than half
(52%) do not consider Quayle qualified to become President if
something were to happen to Bush.
Containing the $155.1 billion federal budget deficit is the
electorate's top assignment for its new leader. The fiscal
shortfall is seen as the country's main economic problem by 43%,
vs. 22% who name unemployment, 16% the trade deficit and 11%
inflation. Seven out of ten support Bush's opposition to new taxes,
but the same large majority predicts that he will fail to avert
them.
Which should be Bush's first priority?
Reducing the budget deficit 33%
Attacking the drug problem 20%
Addressing the trade imbalance 11%
Dealing with terrorism 22%
Public Confidence. A newly elected President dominates whatever
attention is paid to public affairs and outshines Congress. Yet
Bush, though active since Election Day, has yet to convert that
opportunity into a stout foundation of public confidence.
Do you have more confidence in Bush or in Congress to deal with
the country's main problems?
Bush 41%
Congress 41%
Neither 6%
Both the same 3%
Have Bush's actions since being elected made you more confident
about his becoming President, less confident, or haven't they
changed your opinion?
More confident 29%
Less confident 11%
No change 58%
Future Fears. The outgoing Administration's feel-good rhetoric,
together with continued economic expansion and moderate inflation,
has shaped the public's positive perception of pocketbook issues.
A solid majority of 63% consider economic conditions in the country
today either "very good" or "fairly good." But when asked about
the 1990s, Americans harbor doubts about their own prospects and
their children's. Even larger majorities fear that interest rates
and inflation will accelerate during the next year.
Looking ahead five years from now, do you think conditions will
be better than today or worse?
Conditions will be better 39%
Conditions will be worse 43%
Conditions will be the same 10%
Reagan vs. Bush. Reagan's expansive claims about having revived
the American Dream have helped keep his popularity high. But the
public takes a hard-headed view of his performance in some areas;
55% think he did a "poor job" in maintaining programs for the
needy, and 63% fault him for the deficit. In fact, Americans expect
Bush to outperform Reagan on some issues.
Compared with Reagan, do you think Bush will do a better or
worse job on ...
No
Better Worse difference
The deficit 57% 17% 13%
Ethical standards in
Government 62% 13% 14%
Handling Soviet relations 44% 22% 23%
Providing strong leadership 50% 26% 15%
Helping the middle class 53% 22% 15%
While there is no euphoria about Bush, Americans are
transferring their hopes to him as Reagan leaves the arena. The
absence of heady feelings about the new President may serve him
well during his critical first few months in office. Given the
domestic problems he inherits from Reagan, the last thing he needs
is the burden of unrealistic expectations.