| DRUDGE REPORT 2002®  
 
 
 
 
 
 LAND OF FEAR:  AMERICANS SEE FOURTH OF JULY TERROR LIKELY
 Fri Jun 21 2002  18:13:17 ET
 
 Half of Americans (57%) surveyed by TIME magazine and CNN 
believe a terrorist attack on the 4th of July is very or somewhat likely 
(13% and 44% respectively; 11% say "not at all likely," 27% say "not very 
likely").  Americans think that overall, the U.S. has risk of a terrorist 
attack is "high" (39%) or "significant" (29%).
 
 Americans favor Tom Ridge over Rudy Giuliani to head a new cabinet-level 
Department of Homeland Security.  The current director of the office of 
Homeland Security gets 39% support, while New York City's former mayor 
gets 35%. (Nine percent say "neither," 17% are "not sure".)
 
 Two-in-three (69%) want Congress to create the new cabinet-level 
department (23% do not).  Americans believe the new department would make 
the U.S. more secure from future terrorist attacks (71% yes, 24%); make 
them more secure personally (58% yes, 37% no).
 
 But many fear a new Department of Homeland Security would cost too much 
(57% yes, 35% no) and create too much bureaucracy (52% yes, 39% no).
 
 Other poll results include:
 
 MIDDLE EAST:
 
 � Two-thirds (66%) say Bush should offer his own peace plan (27% say no).
� Israel's decision to send in troops to re-occupy Palestinian territory
 
 makes it more difficult to achieve peace, according to 60% (28% said it 
would not be more difficult).
 
 � Americans are split on whether or not a Palestinian state should be 
created (40% favor, 35% oppose, 25% not sure).
 
 � They also are split on whether a Palestinian state would make peace 
more difficult to achieve (40% say yes, 44% say no).
 
 � Equal percentages of Americans consider themselves supporters of 
Israel (44%) and not supporters; 14% are unsure.
 
 � More say the U.S. provides Israel with the "right amount" of support 
(45%) than too much (35%).
 
 U.S. POLITICS:
 
 � Bush's job approval rating is at 70% (down from a one-year high of 89% 
Oct. 12).
 
 � Important midterm election issues will be domestic, say 54% (30% chose 
foreign policy).
 
 WORLD CUP SOCCER:
 
 � 3 in 4 Americans are not following the event (72%) v. 26 percent who 
are following soccer.
 
 Poll  Results will appear in the 
upcoming issue of TIME, on newsstands Monday, June 24.  The TIME/CNN 
survey was conducted by Harris Interactive by telephone among 1,003 adult 
Americans June 19-20, 2002.  The margin of error for the total sample is 
plus or minus 3.1%.
 
 END
 
 
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