One of Josh Marshall’s readers raises a really good point.
Just to put things in perspective… with public approval solidly in the 20s, the war in Iraq is now less popular than a bevy of social issues that have long been considered political poison for Democrats. Imagine if a Democratic president and Congress had made any of these issues their #1 priority, as Bush has with Iraq.
And they wonder why they lost the election?
I wish I had thought of that. Three new national polls out today — CBS News, WaPo/ABC, and USAT/Gallup — all show support for the war completely bottoming out. Americans turned on the war quite a while ago, but now we’re looking at numbers in which a genuine national consensus emerges — 75% of Americans disapprove of Bush’s handling of the war; 62% believe it was not worth the costs, and a combined 61% believe we either cannot or will not win the war.
And as Josh’s reader noted, the result is a political dynamic in which the war in Iraq is “less popular than gay marriage, legalizing pot, banning handguns, and rescinding the death penalty.”
So, the next time you hear James Dobson saying, “The vast majority of Americans oppose gay marriage,” remember, gay marriage has stronger national support than the war in Iraq.