Falling
US gas prices boost Bush poll numbers
AP /Kiichiro Sato
A Flying J gas station in Hebron, Ohio, off of interstate 70, shows
a sign for $1.96.9 per gallon for unleaded gasoline Tuesday, Sept. 26,
2006.
By
Stephanie Griffith
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com 09 28 06
Some Americans are suspicious that recent steep declines in gasoline
prices might be the result of political manipulation, since the savings
at the gas pump come just weeks before critical midterm US elections.
Earlier this year, news of record oil profits led many US consumers
to believe that energy companies had deliberately kept prices artificially
high to improve their bottom line.
Now gas prices have fallen for several consecutive weeks, and recent
polls show that consumers have a new suspicion -- that the price break
is meant to give a boost to a US president and Republican Congress who
had fallen out of favor with voters.
A USA Today/Gallup poll last week found that 42 percent of the roughly
1,000 adults surveyed across the United States believed President George
W. Bush's administration had "deliberately manipulated the price
of gasoline so that it would decrease before this falls elections."
White House spokesman Tony Snow addressed -- and summarily dismissed
-- the speculation at a press briefing earlier this week.
"I have been amused by ... the attempt by some people to say that
the president has been rigging gas prices, which would give him the
kind of magisterial clout unknown to any other human being," he
told reporters.
"It also raises the question, if we're dropping gas prices now,
why on earth did we raise them to 3.50 dollars before?" he said.
Manipulated or not, many observers agree that the falling prices at
the gas pump have lifted Bush's sagging poll numbers.
"It pumps up presidential popularity," said Larry Sabato,
a political analyst at the University of Virginia.
And while many experts believe that the recent rebound enjoyed by Bush
in the polls is a result of a new thrust on security, others say it
is mostly about the newly discounted gas.
"I see a near-perfect correlation between Bush's rise in the polls
and the decline in gas prices," Sabato said.
"I think for most people it's a lot more important than the global
war on terror," he said. "People tank up twice a week. They
feel it in their pocket book," he said.
It does seem clear US consumers are in a more upbeat mood as gas prices
continue to decline. House Speaker Dennis Hastert crowed Tuesday after
economic data showed consumer confidence rising.
"The economy continues to grow to record levels, and the American
people are more convinced now as they feel relief at the pump and have
more money in their pockets," he said.
And while the November 7 midterm elections portend a shakeup of the
political establishment, American voters historically are less eager
for political change if they can fill their cars' gas tanks on the cheap.
Hastert said the improving economy gave voters reason to return Republican
lawmakers to Congress, rather than defecting to opposition Democrats,
whom many political observers believe are poised to take control of
the House of Representatives.
"The American people can be assured that House Republicans will
continue working to keep those prices low and American confidence high,"
Hastert said.
Pundits said that far from being the result of a Republican plot, the
cheap gas can be explained by end of the summer driving season, a mild
Atlantic hurricane season, healthy US energy stockpiles and lessening
tensions over the Iranian nuclear crisis.
The average retail price of gasoline nationwide is now 2.38 dollars
per gallon (3.8 liters), the lowest since March 2006. Oil prices, meanwhile,
have fallen by more than 20 percent since July, when prices topped 78
dollars a barrel.
The Automobile Association of America (AAA), said a gallon of gas one
year ago cost 2.80 dollars, while in early September 2005, average gas
prices were 3.06 dollars per gallon.
US President George W. Bush seems to be a major beneficiary of the lighter
public mood -- whether or not cheaper gas is the cause.
In a Los Angeles Times poll last week, his approval rating rose from
41 percent in late June to 44 percent.
Conversely, some of Bush's worst poll numbers came in May and June,
hovering in the low 30s -- at the very time when gas prices were peaking.
Analyst Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service told the USA
Today newspaper last week that gas prices will drop an additional 10
to 20 cents a gallon by Election Day -- offering further cheer to Bush
and fellow Republicans.
AFP
27 1050 GMT 09 06
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