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AARP: Elderly Angry Over Medicare
.c The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Older voters are angry the Senate was unable to pass a
Medicare drug benefit, and a quarter of them are vowing to vote against an
incumbent candidate if lawmakers remain gridlocked, an AARP poll says.
"Our poll suggests there is a very strong potential for an
anti-incumbency mood," said Chris Hansen, director of advocacy for AARP,
the nation's largest lobbying group for senior citizens. "People aren't
going to accept Republicans blaming Democrats or Democrats blaming
Republicans. Incumbents are going to pay a price."
The Senate left for summer recess last week after Republicans and
Democrats were unable to reach agreement on four different Medicare drug
proposals. The House has passed a $320 billion proposal to provide seniors
on Medicare with a drug benefit.
The poll, conducted July 31-Aug. 4, used a national sample of 1,070
voters age 45 and older. It was conducted for AARP by ICR of Media,
Penn., and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.
Six in 10 of the respondents, or 61 percent, said they were angry the two
parties could not reach a compromise. Of that group, 32 percent described
themselves as very angry. The other 29 percent described themselves as
somewhat angry. Twelve percent of respondents were not too angry and 20
percent were not at all angry. Eight percent either didn't know or refused
to answer.
Twenty-six percent of those polled said they would vote against their
senator if he or she allows partisan differences to prevent passage of the
legislation.
On the Net:
AARP: http//www.aarp.org
08/08/02 14:44 EDT
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