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Election uncertainty in Ohio River Valley


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  The Week in Political Cartoons
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Economy vs. Iraq
A recent Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that Democrats have a 22-point edge among likely voters who care deeply about the economy, with 57 percent saying they're more likely to vote for Democrats and 35 percent indicating they probably would lean Republican.

It's also possible that the country's economic vitality may not be much - if any - consequence to the political party in power.

In the poll, more likely voters ranked the situation in Iraq and terrorism as "extremely important" to them personally than the economy. And, an AP analysis found that while most likely voters rated it an important issue, the economy isn't driving their vote in November.

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A dozen years ago, when Republicans came into power in Congress, health care and crime were more important to voters than the economy. Exit polls from 1994 show that 22 percent of voters picked the economy as their most important issue, compared to health care, 30 percent, and crime, 25 percent.

This campaign season, Bush has been championing his economic policies but public sentiment over his job performance on the economy remains sour.

Only 40 percent of likely voters in an AP-Ipsos poll conducted last week said they approve of how he's handled the economy.

Unemployment at issue
Economic strength is a perpetual concern in the factory-and-farmland Ohio River Valley that mainly encompasses parts of West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, four states that all saw their unemployment rates rise from June to July.

Kentucky's was 6.3 percent, Ohio's was 5.8 percent, Indiana's came in at 5.7 percent and West Virginia's at 5.4 percent - all higher than the national average.

Voters in these states and others wince at suggestions of a robust economy.

"It's just scary," said June Meredith, 49, a self-employed caterer, as she passed along talk of business closures at the Cake Ladies Dream Shoppe along a not-quite-bustling road in New Albany, Ind.

In this region full of commuters, voters bemoan the "trickle down" effect of high gas prices - even though they had dipped from $3 a gallon to $2.61 in Lexington, Ky., one recent week.

"Everything from a loaf of bread to a pair of shoes," seems to cost more, said Ronald Barrett, 70, a Democrat supervising a group doing community service on Scottsburg's quaint town square in Indiana.

At a nearby diner, waitress Jeanine Gordon, 32, who makes the minimum wage, mused about her latest trouble - her van has been in the shop for a week because she and her husband can't afford to fix it.

"This is the least I've ever made in my entire life," the Republican and mother of three said. "The gas prices went up and the tips went down."

In Butler, Ky., business could be better at Thaxton's Canoe Trails and Paddler's Inn, where a six-mile trip on the Licking River costs $15.95 per person and a one-night "cozy cabin" stay for two goes for $59.99.

"People don't want to spend money, and the ones that do want to spend money do it sparingly," said Glen Thaxton, 25, a ponytailed Republican who voted for Democrat John Kerry in 2004. He took over the family business recently, and says he hopes to boost business.

To the south, in New Castle, Ky., Debbie Brewer, 50 and a deli owner, rattled off her biggest complaints about the economy as she counted change while closing her register for the night.

"We'll never see 99 cents again," the Republican said of gas prices. "Everything's jumping - your gas, your food and everything - but your wages don't go up."

After a moment, she cracked a smile and chuckled: "I sound like a Democrat!"

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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