Peach State Poll

From 2001–2008, the Vinson Institute gave voice to Georgia's citizens on important social, economic, and political issues through the Peach State Poll—a public opinion telephone survey it conducted three times a year. Opinions expressed in these polls helped policymakers consider public preferences when making critical decisions.

March 15, 2006

Contact: Theresa Wright, tawright@uga.edu; 706.542.9404

Report & Analysis · Data · Other Poll Releases

When asked whether sending American troops into Iraq was a mistake, 47 percent of Georgians answer in the affirmative, while another 47 percent say it was not a mistake. The remaining 6 percent are undecided. Georgians are, however, less likely to consider the decision to send troops into Iraq a mistake than are Americans as a whole, and 79 percent express a high level of confidence in the U.S. military. Georgians’ approval level of the president’s handling of his job and their views on the U.S. economy are very similar to those of other Americans.

These findings are from the most recent Peach state Poll, a quarterly survey of public opinion conducted by the University of Georgia’s Carl Vinson Institute of Government. The poll also finds a high level of dissatisfaction with the federal government’s response to the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. A plurality of Georgians (47 percent) characterize the federal government’s response as poor. “Among African Americans in Georgia, 72 percent say that the federal government’s response was poor,” says poll director Rich Clark. African Americans (59 percent) were also much more likely than Georgians generally (40 percent) to say that the federal government should pay most of the costs of rebuilding the damaged areas. Twenty-three percent of Georgians say that state governments should pay most of the costs of rebuilding. Another 20 percent say that those costs should be borne by the people and businesses directly affected by the hurricanes.


Other Peach State Poll results:

• Only 10 percent of Georgians are of the opinion that the Gulf Coast areas decimated by floods should not be rebuilt. Sixteen percent say that the areas should be rebuilt just as they were, while 68 percent say that the areas should be rebuilt, but differently.

• A vast majority of Georgians rate the U.S. economy as either fair (42 percent) or poor (26 percent). Only 32 percent rate the national economy as either excellent (6 percent) or good (26 percent).

• Georgians do not express a high level of trust in the federal government. Only 29 percent of Georgians say that they can trust the government in Washington to do what is right either just about always (5 percent) or most of the time (24 percent). A plurality say that they trust their government in Washington only some of the time, and another 29 percent say that they hardly ever trust it to do what is right.

These data were taken from a Peach State Poll survey conducted between January 27 and February 5, 2006. The poll included 803 telephone interviews of randomly selected adults in Georgia. For a sample of this size, the margin of error at the 95 percent confidence level is +/-3.5 percent.

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