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Trust In Government? Poll Finds Nearly 80% Of Americans Don't

LIZ SIDOTI   04/19/10 11:23 AM ET   AP

Trust In Government
A new poll shows that nearly 80% of American's don't trust government.

WASHINGTON — America's "Great Compromiser" Henry Clay called government "the great trust," but most Americans today have little faith in Washington's ability to deal with the nation's problems.

Public confidence in government is at one of the lowest points in a half century, according to a survey from the Pew Research Center. Nearly 8 in 10 Americans say they don't trust the federal government and have little faith it can solve America's ills, the survey found.

The findings illustrate the ominous situation President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party face as they struggle to maintain their comfortable congressional majorities in this fall's elections. Midterm prospects are typically tough for the party in power. Add a toxic environment like this and lots of incumbent Democrats could be out of work.

Released Sunday, the survey found that just 22 percent of those questioned say they can trust Washington almost always or most of the time and just 19 percent say they are basically content with it. Nearly half say the government negatively affects their daily lives, a sentiment that's grown over the past dozen years.

This anti-government feeling has driven the tea party movement, reflected in fierce protests this past week.

"The government's been lying to people for years. Politicians make promises to get elected, and when they get elected, they don't follow through," says Cindy Wanto, 57, a registered Democrat from Nemacolin, Pa., who joined several thousand for a rally in Washington on April 15 – the tax filing deadline. "There's too much government in my business. It was a problem before Obama, but he's certainly not helping fix it."

Majorities in the survey call Washington too big and too powerful, and say it's interfering too much in state and local matters. The public is split over whether the government should be responsible for dealing with critical problems or scaled back to reduce its power, presumably in favor of personal responsibility.

About half say they want a smaller government with fewer services, compared with roughly 40 percent who want a bigger government providing more. The public was evenly divided on those questions long before Obama was elected. Still, a majority supported the Obama administration exerting greater control over the economy during the recession.

Only twice since the 1950s has public skepticism dipped this deeply – from 1992 to 1995 during which time it hit 17 percent, and 1978 to 1980, bottoming out at 25 percent. The nation was going through economic struggles during both of those periods.

"Trust in government rarely gets this low," said Andrew Kohut, director of the nonpartisan center that conducted the survey. "Some of it's backlash against Obama. But there are a lot of other things going on."

And, he added: "Politics has poisoned the well."

The survey found that Obama's policies were partly to blame for a rise in distrustful, anti-government views. In his first year in office, the president orchestrated a government takeover of Detroit automakers, secured a $787 billion stimulus package and pushed to overhaul the health care system.

But the poll also identified a combination of factors that contributed to the electorate's hostility: the recession that Obama inherited from President George W. Bush; a dispirited public; and anger with Congress and politicians of all political leanings.

"I want an honest government. This isn't an honest government. It hasn't been for some time," said self-described independent David Willms, 54, of Sarasota, Fla. He faulted the White House and Congress under both parties.

The poll was based on four surveys done from March 11 to April 11 on landline and cell phones. The largest survey, of 2,500 adults, has a margin of sampling error of 2.5 percentage points; the others, of about 1,000 adults each, has a margin of sampling error of 4 percentage points.

In the short term, the deepening distrust is politically troubling for Obama and Democrats. Analysts say out-of-power Republicans could well benefit from the bitterness toward Washington come November, even though voters blame them, too, for partisan gridlock that hinders progress.

In a democracy built on the notion that citizens have a voice and a right to exercise it, the long-term consequences could prove to be simply unhealthy – or truly debilitating. Distrust could lead people to refuse to vote or get involved in their own communities. Apathy could set in, or worse – violence.

Democrats and Republicans both accept responsibility and fault the other party for the electorate's lack of confidence.

"This should be a wake-up call. Both sides are guilty," said Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. She pointed to "nonsense" that goes on during campaigns that leads to "promises made but not promises kept." Still, she added: "Distrust of government is an all-American activity. It's something we do as Americans and there's nothing wrong with it."

Sen. Scott Brown, a Republican who won a long-held Democratic Senate seat in Massachusetts in January by seizing on public antagonism toward Washington, said: "It's clear Washington is broken. There's too much partisan bickering to be able to solve the problems people want us to solve."

And, he added: "It's going to be reflected in the elections this fall."

But Matthew Dowd, a top strategist on Bush's re-election campaign who now shuns the GOP label, says both Republicans and Democrats are missing the mark.

"What the country wants is a community solution to the problems but not necessarily a federal government solution," Dowd said. Democrats are emphasizing the federal government, while Republicans are saying it's about the individual; neither is emphasizing the right combination to satisfy Americans, he said.

___

On the Net:

Pew Research Center: http://people-press.org/

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WASHINGTON — America's "Great Compromiser" Henry Clay called government "the great trust," but most Americans today have little faith in Washington's ability to deal with the nation's problems. ...
WASHINGTON — America's "Great Compromiser" Henry Clay called government "the great trust," but most Americans today have little faith in Washington's ability to deal with the nation's problems. ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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scjk67 06:33 AM on 04/19/2010
80%, sure h3ll they didn't ask me to be polled. Misleading Headline and article. During the Obama SOTU address past January warned both party to get on working for the American people instead of special interest, did they listen....NO. Time to throw out the incumbents, need somebody that'll move forward into the 21st century ideology instead of 19-20th century. Too many of them in both House and Senate  Read More...
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ChangeurMind
10:44 AM on 05/06/2010
I don't trust a Government that does NOT go after War Criminals who knowingly went into the wrong country for profit. Allowing terrorists to change strategy and allow US soldiers to be used for Halliburton and KBR. Ensign, Vitter, Stevens, Blankenfine, Massey, all of them.... above the law. How can you trust a government of lies and elites?
05:44 PM on 04/27/2010
I came back from Vietnam and I knew I couldn't
trust this god-awful government of ours . . .
then came the Savings and Loan Crisis,
then came the dot-com Bubble,
then came the Iraq/Af-Pak wars,
then came the Great Recession.
So I KNOW I can't trust the Big Brother Empire
run by the Big Money Profiteers.
The leadership of the Dems act like Republicans
so I treat them like Republicans -- I don't vote for them.
Don't give me that ''lesser of the evils'' argument.
I only vote for political parties who want to dismantle the Federal Government,
and make it adhere to the 23-enumerated powers in the US Constitution.
The only way to take back the government for the people is to
be governed by State, County & City government,
and only allow the Federal government to have 23-powers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Congress#Enumerated_powers
06:23 PM on 04/22/2010
I think I distrust articles like this more than
I distrust government......articles like this
makes a lot of assumptions and does
not measure how long these people have
distrusted government and what the demographics
of the sampled group is.

So I would deem this poll dubious at best!!!!!

Many detractors of polls like these are convinced that
if a poll is crafted to determine the amount of a sentiment
it will indeed find that sentiment every time.....

In political times like these articles like this seems like
thinly veiled pieces of "right-wing" dogma aimed at doing
nothing more than to generate over all distrust because
every knit-wit anchor in the country will be parroting the
contrived statistics published in this poll.....
01:32 PM on 04/20/2010
This AP article was a complete farce. The actual numbers show 56% trust the government to do the right thing "some of the time"... which was ignored by the article.

They took 22% (who said they trust government to do the right thing always or most of the time) and subtracted that from 100%. This yielded 78%, which they rounded up to 80%.

And again, they COMPLETELY IGNORED THE 56% who said they trust the government "some of the time" to do the right thing.

The Associated Press... in this case, either laughingly incompetent, or shameless right-wing liars. They should issue an apology and a correction, but that's very unlikely.

Please help correct the record on this, people, including those of you at Huffington Post.

This is a critical time in our nation's history for standing up for fixing those things are are deficient in our government instead of constanting insulting and maligning those who work in it. In any case, A LIE IS A LIE.

The usage of the statistics here was just plain wrong!
02:22 PM on 04/23/2010
I don't know. "Some of the time" is pretty vague and sounds like it's primarily the minority of the time. As in, "Yeah, sometimes I think the government screws up and does something right for a change".

Or perhaps "Some of the time, when Obama steps in and makes them do something".

With RCP polls showing the congressional approval rating hovering at about 22%, these numbers sound fairly accurate to me.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/other/congressional_job_approval-903.html
01:02 PM on 04/20/2010
And how many citizens mistrust the media? Most, I would say, except for the idiots who watch fox.
06:52 PM on 04/22/2010
Articles like this one will be reported
on by FOX you can bet on it...
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BrickSykes
"Professor, Harvard; Chess Mixmaster
12:17 PM on 04/20/2010
Okay, I looked around and found this: Ms. Sidoti works for the 'Associated Press' out of Atlanta and seems to be a sore loser from 11/08. She shilled for McCain. Surprised, huh?

http://mediamatters.org/countyfair/200812100001

HuffPo should at least put a disclaimer in the headline with wild-A$$ claims like this one. AP used to be less rabid in their 'conservative' support, but I guess they're trying extra hard since they're being eclipsed by new outlets.

Brick
07:08 PM on 04/22/2010
ahh good catch!!!

And the knuckleheads from the networks
will cite this article and the poll in their
news broadcasts.....

this is also how the right sows their seeds
of mis-information...
leonel
MA, Pol.Sci.; MA, Ed.; JD. Veteran.
09:31 AM on 04/20/2010
WE ARE SO PATHETIC THAT ONLY COMEDY RELIEF WILL TURN THINGS AROUND, SO THIS IS THE MOST ACCURATE POLL:

Question, dear Mr. and Ms. John and Jane Q. Public, are you:

Part of the worst generation in American history?

Part of the most obese generation in American history?

Part of the most family-dysfunctional generation in American history?

Do you agree that the economic and political crisis was caused not only
by politicians and bankers but by the greedy and impulsive public?

The public should answer 80% "Yes" to all the questions are they are bigger liars than politicians.
leonel
MA, Pol.Sci.; MA, Ed.; JD. Veteran.
08:43 AM on 04/20/2010
NOBODY QUESTIONS THAT PEOPLE ARE DISAPPOINTED IN GOVERNMENT, ESPECIALLY CONGRESS, BUT THE PUBLIC SHOULD BE EVEN MORE DISAPPOINTED IN THEMSELVES, THIS IS THE MOST DYSFUNCTIONAL GENERATION EVER.

The problem is more specific than most surveys and commentary describe. The problem can be completely focused on the day-to-day operation of Congress, the way they investigate problems and pass legislation. When pollsters ask the public, they should be a lot more specific.

Congress has been a huge disappointment to the Obama Administration, but of course, infighting won't help. It was a big problem for Jimmy Carter when he was president.

The Obama Administration is the best one in an entire generation, but the problems are also the biggest ever. The main mission has to be to get Congress to be more functional, and this will require at least a minimum amount of bipartisanship. So this is what has to be brought about. Obama has to do whatever public cajoling that is necessary. This means improving PR effort, calling out the Republican extremists and liars (like Cantor, McCain, McConnell) but at the same time being modest, moderate and pragmatic.

Republicans are on an extremely conservative and irrational trajectory that cannot succeed for long. The public, whatever their failings, in the longer term are not extremists or liars and will vote against them when it is brought out.

The public is like a big jury and will favor the likable, moderate side.
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AnnC0725
01:16 AM on 04/20/2010
Well..makes you wonder what the 20% is thinking...On Millionare..if the 80% studio audience votes for an answer...99% of the time they are right.
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01:19 AM on 04/20/2010
Take the poll Puma Ann. It's pretty unscientific.
12:50 AM on 04/20/2010
When Americans stop voting for Republicans, they can start trusting government again. But after 8 years of Bush and nearly 35 years of Republican control of Washington in one form or another, can we blame the voters? Well, yes they can. Americans did this to themselves by voting for and supporting Republicans.
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09:38 AM on 04/21/2010
the democrats are going on their third year of total control of the government. I guess your post is bunk? or two years old?
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Shan Wells
Sciencey sun venerator + political cartoonist
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12:12 AM on 04/20/2010
DETROIT — General Motors Co. will fully repay the $6.7 billion loan portion of its U.S. government aid earlier than its previously promised payback date of June, a person briefed on the plans said Monday.

http://www.huffi_ngtonpost.com/2010/04/19/gm-to-repay-government-lo_n_543816.html
12:14 AM on 04/20/2010
Here you are all excited about two $1 billion payments but you are so wrapped in your politcal view you make Bachmann look like she is smart.

"Once the loans are paid back, GM would still owe $45.3 billion to the government. That will be repaid with the stock offering"
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12:18 AM on 04/20/2010
Here's my thing with TARP, when it was originally given out, nobody knew if we would get anything back. The jury is still out, because money is still coming in. None of these companies want to remain under stricter regulations from the Government.
12:51 AM on 04/20/2010
GM will survive and its stock will go up. And our Federal government will stand to make a lot of money off this investment. It was a good call.
12:17 AM on 04/20/2010
And what say you about this bit of tricky accounting?

---------------

According to the CBO, losses related to the investment portfolios of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are projected to total $370 billion through 2020, though the figure will fluctuate depending on the health of the housing market. The Treasury's $89 billion estimate for the total bailout cost doesn't incorporate CBO's projected losses at Fannie and Freddie because, for budgeting purposes, the Obama administration technically considers them private entities. Taxpayers are potentially on the hook for losses at Fannie and Freddie.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304846504575177950029886696.html?mod=rss_com_mostcommentart
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Shan Wells
Sciencey sun venerator + political cartoonist
11:29 AM on 04/20/2010
It's not really tricky accounting, as the firms are truly a different type of beast. We own them partially, so in essense, we loaned money to ourself. The losses are well known, and no one is trying to hide anything.

The question you have to ask yourself, is, "was it worth it?"

The answer is undoubted "yes." However, I'm sure you have a differing opinion, and I look forward to reading your annotated reply.
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CJHAN
Live for today Fight for tomorrow.
11:58 PM on 04/19/2010
I wonder where these guys where when Bush sent me and likely some of there own kids to fight an illegal war in Iraq, I would have loved to herer from them then.
12:09 AM on 04/20/2010
Why would you love to hear from them?

If the nation building plan was rolled out at the begining . . . the war would hae had no suport. These days the rules of engagement for our troops is beyond pathetic . . . they're basically foreign police.
12:09 AM on 04/20/2010
Fight to win or don't fight at all, we didn't and aren't fighting to win . . . so it's time to come home.
11:58 PM on 04/19/2010
Hi, my name is Postman66 . . . I will argue up and down this post about other people's distrust of the Government when on the same page I wrote:

"I've had a healthy distrust of government since Nixon"

Thanks for playing.
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12:03 AM on 04/20/2010
The operative word is healthy, not rank paranoia like this Birther Tro// cheer leading you.
12:10 AM on 04/20/2010
He's leading me how?

I just stonewalled your BS arguments . . . that is all.

A healthy distrust puts you in the 80% :)
11:39 PM on 04/19/2010
And in even more news . . .

Lieberman's Committee SUBPOENAS Obama Administration Over Fort Hood Shooting, Alleging Cover-Up
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11:46 PM on 04/19/2010
As they should. I wouldn't expect much to come out of it.