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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Shutdown took toll on Montana delegation, poll official says

Matt Volz Associated Press

HELENA – Montana’s entire congressional delegation may have taken a hit in their approval ratings because of the 16-day federal government shutdown, the director of a new Montana State University-Billings poll said Friday.

The poll, conducted during the shutdown earlier this month, asked state residents their views on several national and state issues and to assess the performance of their elected leaders.

Most respondents said they opposed President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, but even more people, regardless of political party affiliation, opposed shutting down the federal government as a way of delaying its implementation, the poll found.

The respondents gave Democratic U.S. Sens. Max Baucus and Jon Tester both about a 44 percent approval rating, while freshman Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Daines received a 39 percent approval rating.

By comparison, respondents gave Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock, the only state elected official included in the poll, a 52 percent approval rating.

The poll has a 5 percent margin of error. MSU Billings students interviewed 410 Montanans by telephone Oct. 7-10, calling both landlines and cellphones.

Poll director Craig Wilson said pollsters did not specifically ask whether the approval ratings were tied to the government shutdown, but the connection is clear.

“I attribute it to the discombobulation going on in Washington, and we were doing the poll at the time of the shutdown,” Wilson said. “When you look at the approval ratings of the federally elected officials, especially compared to Bullock, it absolutely, positively hurt all of them.”

The shutdown began Oct. 1 after Democrats refused House Republican demands to defund the health care law as a condition of passing a spending measure. Daines, a freshman Republican, was among those taking a stand against the health care law, though he voted to reopen the government Oct. 16.