Democracy Corps

Overview

A new survey by Democracy Corps and Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, completed shortly after reports about insurance giant AIG paying out millions in bonuses to its top executives, shows voters overwhelmingly blaming AIG management for the mess. A healthy majority of voters place the blame on AIG management while nearly a third also blames Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner for the scandal. Just one-in-ten voters place blame on President Obama, demonstrating that this was no “Katrina moment,” with respect to the president, as suggested by Frank Rich.

The scandal has simultaneously convinced voters that we need greater government oversight over the financial industry and that the federal government is incapable of preventing the kind of wasteful spending demonstrated by AIG, though a much larger majority, nearly 7-in-ten voters, say the bonuses demonstrate the need for tighter regulation. If this were a “Katrina moment,” it was only on the need for government to balance the excesses of the private sector.

Analysis: Scandal Proves Need for Greater Oversight of Financial Industry and Government Ineptitude

A new survey by Democracy Corps and Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, completed shortly after reports about insurance giant AIG paying out millions in bonuses to its top executives, shows voters overwhelmingly blaming AIG management for the mess. A healthy majority of voters place the blame on AIG management while nearly a third also blames Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner for the scandal. Just one-in-ten voters place blame on President Obama, demonstrating that this was no “Katrina moment,” with respect to the president, as suggested by Frank Rich.

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