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    Bush Job Approval Averaging About 10 Points Higher Among Men Than Among Women

    Bush Job Approval Averaging About 10 Points Higher Among Men Than Among Women

    GALLUP NEWS SERVICE

    PRINCETON, NJ -- President George W. Bush continues to have a significantly higher job approval rating among men than he does among women, and a month-by-month analysis shows that this difference has remained roughly the same throughout his administration.

    Gallup has measured Bush's job approval 16 times since his inauguration on January 20, with the following results:

    • Average Job Approval: Overall

    57%

    • Average Job Approval: Men

    62%

    • Average Job Approval: Women

    52%

    Here are the survey-by-survey and month-by-month averages:

    DATE

    OVERALL APPROVAL

    APPROVAL: MEN

    APPROVAL: WOMEN

    GENDER GAP: MEN-WOMEN

    GENDER GAP: MONTHLY AVERAGE

    %

    %

    %

    %

    %

    2001

    Jul 19-22

    56

    62

    50

    12

    July: 8.5

    2001

    Jul 10-11

    57

    60

    55

    5

    2001

    Jun 28-Jul 1

    52

    57

    48

    9

    June: 10.7

    2001

    Jun 11-17

    55

    61

    49

    12

    2001

    Jun 8-10

    55

    61

    50

    11

    2001

    May 18-20

    56

    61

    51

    10

    May: 10.3

    2001

    May 10-14

    56

    63

    50

    13

    2001

    May 7-9

    53

    58

    50

    8

    2001

    Apr. 20-22

    62

    67

    56

    11

    April: 9

    2001

    Apr. 6-8

    59

    63

    56

    7

    2001

    Mar. 26-28

    53

    58

    47

    11

    March: 10

    2001

    Mar. 9-11

    58

    64

    53

    11

    2001

    Mar. 5-7

    63

    67

    59

    8

    2001

    Feb. 19-21

    62

    63

    60

    3

    February: 8

    2001

    Feb 9-11

    57

    61

    54

    7

    2001

    Feb 1-4

    57

    64

    50

    14

    OVERALL AVERAGE

    AVERAGE: MEN

    AVERAGE: WOMEN

    AVERAGE GENDER GAP

    56.94

    61.88

    52.38

    9.5

    As can be seen, the monthly gender gap between men and women has varied only slightly, between a low point of 8% in February and a high point of 10.7% in June, with ups and downs during the other months. This type of variation among subgroups is normal, and we do not detect a firm pattern that might suggest that Bush is trending toward either a wider or a narrower gap between men and women, across the first six months of his administration.

    In terms of individual surveys, the gender gap was largest in the very first survey, conducted on February 1-4 (14% gap) and was smallest in a survey conducted just a while later, February 19-21, when it was just 3 points. At the same time, there has been variation in recent weeks, with the gap going from a small 5 percentage points in the July 10-11 survey to 12 percentage points in our latest survey, conducted July 19-22.

    Survey Methods

    These results are based on telephone interviews with randomly selected national samples of at least 1,000 adults, 18 years and older, conducted in 2001. For results based on these samples, one can say with 95 percent confidence that the maximum error attributable to sampling and other random effects is plus or minus 3 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.


    Gallup https://news.gallup.com/poll/4762/Bush-Job-Approval-Averaging-About-Points-Higher-Among-Men-Than-Among-Women.aspx
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