Thursday, June 05, 2008
Some say pay raise anger is over
Interesting article at PolitickerPA.com, an online magazine that cover politics, that concludes that the anger over the July 2005 pay raise has passed.
"The targets that might still be available are fewer and the issue doesn't seem to have nearly the resonance it did a few years ago," Chris Borick, a pollster and political science professor at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, told PolitickerPA. "That doesn't mean it's not simmering in the background, and that there's not a simmering emotional core among the electorate."
It might be too early to say for sure that voter anger is over. Let's wait until after the Nov. 4 election to see how many incumbents are voted out. Some incumbents in the Senate who supported the pay raise are facing voters for the first time because they run for re-election every four years.
Read the full article by Dan Hirschhorn here.
"The targets that might still be available are fewer and the issue doesn't seem to have nearly the resonance it did a few years ago," Chris Borick, a pollster and political science professor at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, told PolitickerPA. "That doesn't mean it's not simmering in the background, and that there's not a simmering emotional core among the electorate."
It might be too early to say for sure that voter anger is over. Let's wait until after the Nov. 4 election to see how many incumbents are voted out. Some incumbents in the Senate who supported the pay raise are facing voters for the first time because they run for re-election every four years.
Read the full article by Dan Hirschhorn here.