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Support for Iraq policy dives after Katrina
A Gallup poll published on Monday found 66 percent of respondents favored the immediate withdrawal of some or all of the U.S. troops in Iraq, a 10 percentage point jump in two weeks. Bush's personal approval on Iraq fell from 40 percent to 32 percent in the same period. In a CBS/New York Times poll the previous week, 75 percent said Bush had no clear plan for bringing U.S. troops home. Republicans in Congress, who know they face difficult mid-term elections in November 2006, are becoming increasingly concerned about their prospects. "The mood up here among Republicans is very very sour," said one senior staffer who did not want to be named. For many Americans, the connection between Katrina and Iraq comes down to one word -- money. "Americans want to attend to the needs of people at home before we take care of people overseas," said Steven Wayne, a political scientist at Georgetown University. "But this president rarely if ever goes back on his own decisions and his legacy is largely connected to Iraq." NEW CONTEXT Said Jillson, "People know we're running huge deficits and they know the costs have just rocketed upward. Many Americans are now looking at the Iraq situation in that context." Congress has already approved $62.3 billion for recovery and reconstruction
after Katrina and the eventual cost could reach $200 billion or more.
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