강서구 영어 강서구 수학 이에 따라 학교는 수능 준비를 위해 과거로 회기 하려고 할수도 있고, 학교 정보없이 평가될 댸 유리한 고지를 점령하기 위하 색다른 모습으로 나타날수도 있다. went below the 50 percent mark in AP-Ipsos polling in December 2004.[344] Thereafter, his approval ratings and approval of his handling of domestic and foreign policy issues steadily dropped. After his re-election in 2004, Bush received increasingly 강서구 영어 강서구 수학 heated criticism from across the political spectrum[4][5][345] for his handling of the Iraq War, his response to Hurricane Katrina,[6][7][346] and to the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse, NSA warrantless surveillance, the Plame affair, and Guantanamo Bay detention camp controversies.[347] Amid this criticism, the 강서구 영어 강서구 수학Democratic Party regained control of Congress in the 2006 elections. Polls conducted in 2006 showed an average of 37 percent approval ratings for Bush,[348] the lowest for any second-term president at that point in his term since Harry S. Truman in March 1951 (when Truman's approval rating was 28 percent),[344][349] which contributed to what Bush called the "thumping" of the Republican Party in the 2006 mid-term elections.[350] Throughout most of 2007, Bush's approval rating hovered in the mid-thirties;[351] the average for his entire second term was 37 percent, according to Gallup.[352] President Bush's approval rating with key events marked, 2001–2006 By the beginning of 2008, his final year in office, Bush's approval rating had dropped to a low of just 19 percent, largely from the loss of support among Republicans.[339] Commenting on his low poll numbers and accusations of being "the worst president,"[353][354] Bush would say, "I make decisions on what I think is right for the United States based upon principles. I frankly don't give a damn about the polls."[355] There were calls for Bush's impeachment, though most polls showed a plurality of Americans would not support such an action.[356] The arguments offered for impeachment usually centered on the NSA warrantless surveillance controversy,[357] the Bush administration's justification for the war in Iraq, and alleged violations of the Geneva Conventions.[358] Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), who had run against Bush during the 2004 presidential campaign, introduced 35 articles of impeachment on the floor of the House of Representatives against Bush on June 9, 2008, but Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) declared that impeachment was "off the table".[359] In April 2008, Bush's disapproval ratings reached the highest ever recorded for any president in the 70-year history of the Gallup poll, with 69 percent of those polled disapproving of the job Bush was doing as president and 28 percent approving—although the majority (66 percent) of Republicans still approved of his job performance.[360] In polls conducted in the fall, just before the 2008 election, his approval ratings remained at record lows of 19 to 20 percent,[361][362] while his disapproval ratings ranged from 67 percent to as high as 75 percent.[362][363] In polling conducted January 9–11, 2009, his final job approval rating by Gallup was 34 percent, which placed him on par with Jimmy Carter and Harry S. Truman, the other presidents whose final Gallup ratings measured