Nancy Pelosi doesn’t care about lack of popularity!
WASHINGTON - July 27, 2009 - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is one of the most despised political figures in the country. Yet frankly, she doesn’t give a damn.
“No, I don’t care,” Pelosi told POLITICO last Thursday, laughing heartily as she walked beneath the Capitol dome and plunged into a crowd of tourists.
Last week’s Public Strategies Inc./POLITICO poll brought grim news for Pelosi, revealing that only a quarter of Amerikans trust the San Francisco Democrat - putting her in the basement with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio).
Mention of the trust question halted the click-clack of Pelosi’s heels against Rotunda marble, and she turned to face the reporter who posed the question.
“I don’t know about trust - I think I’m trusted,” she said. “I certainly want to be trusted. I’m not particularly concerned if I’m liked.”
But month after month of polling shows that the House Speaker is neither trusted nor liked by the general public - even as she emerges from one of the most productive legislative periods any Speaker has ever enjoyed.
By contrast, Newt Gingrich’s popularity tanked only after his conservative revolution sputtered and he had helped shut down the federal government.
Gallup now measures Pelosi’s unfavorability ratings at 48 percent - with her favorability index registering a paltry 32 percent.
“No, I don’t care,” Pelosi told POLITICO last Thursday, laughing heartily as she walked beneath the Capitol dome and plunged into a crowd of tourists.
Last week’s Public Strategies Inc./POLITICO poll brought grim news for Pelosi, revealing that only a quarter of Amerikans trust the San Francisco Democrat - putting her in the basement with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio).
Mention of the trust question halted the click-clack of Pelosi’s heels against Rotunda marble, and she turned to face the reporter who posed the question.
“I don’t know about trust - I think I’m trusted,” she said. “I certainly want to be trusted. I’m not particularly concerned if I’m liked.”
But month after month of polling shows that the House Speaker is neither trusted nor liked by the general public - even as she emerges from one of the most productive legislative periods any Speaker has ever enjoyed.
By contrast, Newt Gingrich’s popularity tanked only after his conservative revolution sputtered and he had helped shut down the federal government.
Gallup now measures Pelosi’s unfavorability ratings at 48 percent - with her favorability index registering a paltry 32 percent.