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'Whiners' May Decide Swing States

Meteor Blades over at Daily Kos has a riff, "Poll Finds Massive 'Whining' in Florida, Ohio," discussing the new NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard School of Public Health poll (toplines here) in relation to Phil Gramm's "whiner"-driven "mental recession." Blades does a nice job of presenting the data, which shows majorities of respondents in both states worried about real-world economic problems.

The poll is interesting in that it gets respondents to break down the sources of their economic discontent into categories such as "Problems paying for gas" (55%); "Problems getting a good-paying job/raise in pay" (39%); "Problem buying/selling home/home losing value" (36%); "Problems paying for health care and insurance" (32%); "Problems paying for college/education cost" (26%); and "Losing a job" (26%) and other problems. Respondents also saw a connection between the Iraq mess and their economic problems:

...according to the poll, the top two things people in Florida say would help the most are stopping American jobs from going overseas and pulling U.S. troops out of Iraq.

As Dee Moskona, a 47-year-old attorney and mother in Miami, quoted in Blades' report puts it, "Iraq is draining everything."

If Democratic registration meets high expectations, swing state voters will elect leaders who will address their very real economic concerns and bring home our troops --- and our money.

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