QUOTE
What exactly are you riding at BENT???
bush's poll numbers are in the TOILET, the issue he chose to spend all his political capital on SOCIAL SEC PRIVATE ACCOUNTS is a MISERABLE FAILURE ... is that the kind of thing you want to hear to back up my assertion that the bush term 2 is a MAJOR DUD?
Hmmm! Interesting, I wonder where those of your yoke are if Bush is in the toilet, feeding in the Cesspools I suppose?
I guess after the USA, UK and Australian Elections, and now in Europe, you have few place to hide now huh TQ! You can always hide out with the pedofiles and Boy Girls in Patty Beach I guess?
Getting the idea of how out touch you and those of your yoke are YET! French adults are dissatisfied with Jacques Chirac, according to a poll by BVA published in L’Express. 39 per cent of respondents have a positive opinion of the president, a nine per cent drop since April
http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/index.cfm?...tem&itemID=7386Germany’s chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was forced to call for an early election later this year – 12 months ahead of schedule – after a humiliating defeat for his party in the country’s most populous state.
The Social Democrats had held power for 39 years in the western region of 18.1 million people, which includes the industrial Ruhr Valley. But this year, the party faced widespread discontent over surging unemployment – which currently stands at 12.1% in the region and 12.0 percent nationally.
The state government in Duesseldorf was the only remaining one at the state level to mirror Schroeder’s national government coalition of Social Democrats and Greens.
Official results showed the Social Democrats taking 37.1% of the vote Sunday, well behind the Christian Democrats’ 44.8%. Schroeder’s party lost 5.7 percentage points from the last state election in 2000.
The Greens and Free Democrats each took 6.2%, while a new party founded by left-wing activists disgruntled with Schroeder’s reform drive took 2.2%. Turnout was 63%.
That gave the Christian Democrats 89 seats in the state legislature and the Free Democrats 12, more than enough to take power together. The Social Democrats won 74 seats and the Greens 12.
Schroeder’s party has bled support in state elections over recent years. The Social Democrats governed 11 of Germany’s 16 states in 1999, a year after he took office; Sunday’s loss leaves the party with only five state governors.
This year, Schroeder’s coalition has faced a scandal over visa rules that allegedly let in criminals from the former Soviet Union – an issue that has hurt the popularity of foreign minister Joschka Fischer, a Green.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=4590372That is all!