Bush Lost Battle Over the Surplus, But Won Tax Cut War

Bush lost the battle for public opinion about what to do with the surplus. Pew Research Center surveys in early 2001 found that nearly twice as many favored using the budget surplus for securing the finances of Social Security and Medicare than for a tax cut (37% vs. 19%).
Yet the tax cut received a boost from an unexpected rise in economic anxiety. When Bush took office, the economy was thriving – the unemployment rate of around 4% in early 2001 would be cheered today – but Americans sensed that the 1990s economic boom was drawing to a close. A Washington Post/ABC News poll in January 2001 found that 55% said that the economy was heading into a recession.
Read the complete findings Bush Lost Battle Over the Surplus, But Won Tax Cut War on the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press Web site.
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