Posted: 23 May 2014 02:38 PM PDT
Just
5 percent of US voters think most members of Congress have done a good
enough job to deserve re-election, according to a new poll.
Ratings of the US Congress
remain overwhelmingly negative, with the vast majority of voters
disillusioned with lawmakers and political parties, a new poll shows.
Just 12 percent of Americans
approve of the job Congress is doing while 80 percent disapprove,
according to a CBS News Poll released on Wednesday.
Furthermore, only 5 percent of
American voters believe most members of Congress have done a good
enough job to deserve re-election, the poll shows. While this number has
been low historically, 5 percent is the lowest ever recorded in CBS
News polls; nearly nine in 10 say it’s time to give new people a chance.
There is also a sense of
disillusionment among the American public. Forty-five percent of
Americans, a record high in CBS News polls, now say they agree with the
statement “It makes no real difference which party controls Congress,
things go on just as they did before.”
With less than six months
until this year’s midterm elections, voters are not too enthusiastic
about voting either. More than four in 10 are less enthusiastic about
voting this year compared to previous congressional elections, the
survey revealed.
The country’s two major
political parties are not viewed positively either, although the
Democratic Party is viewed more favorably (43 percent favorable) than
the Republican Party (33 percent favorable).
Voters choose the economy (39
percent) as the issue that will be most important in deciding their vote
for Congress this November, ahead of health care (22 percent), the
federal budget deficit (11 percent) and the environment (9 percent).
The poll also suggests that
Americans are somewhat cynical when it comes to participating in the
electoral process. Three in four think wealthy Americans have a better
chance than others of influencing the election process. Only 23 percent
say all Americans have an equal chance to do so.
Most Americans (71 percent)
continue to think individual financial contributions to political
campaigns should be limited. The majorities of voters would like to see
campaign contributions limited, but Democrats and independents are more
likely to hold that view than Republicans.

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