Who wooda thunk it? Another shot in the foot for the Democrats. Diversion tactic? Yes.
  By Donald Lambro (Contact) * Friday, April 24, 2009 
Americans are not  very interested in seeing the government investigate interrogation tactics used  on suspected terrorists by Bush administration officials, according to  pollsters. 
"They don't seem to be that riled up as far as seeing some kind  of retribution or truth commissions. They want the administration to focus on  fixing the economy. They see this whole interrogation thing as a diversion,"  said pollster David E. Johnson of Strategic Vision in Atlanta. 
Recent polls  that he conducted in several states from New Jersey to Florida "showed they seem  to be opposed to the White House's release of memos detailing aggressive  interrogation techniques used on terrorists, that they feel that everything that  happened was done in a time of war and they want to move beyond 9/11 and the  Bush administration," Mr. Johnson said. 
President Obama on Tuesday refused  to rule out the possibility of taking legal action against Bush administration  officials who authorized severe interrogation practices such as waterboarding,  but said that was a question Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. would have to  answer. His remarks ignited new debate in Congress over whether investigative  hearings should be held or an independent commission be appointed to re-examine  the interrogation methods and find out who authorized them. 
But recent polls  suggest there was relatively little support among Americans for revisiting rules  that allowed CIA agents to deprive suspects of sleep and to employ the  waterboarding technique that creates the sensation of drowning. 
"Only 28  percent of U.S. voters think the Obama administration should do any further  investigating of how the Bush administration treated terrorism suspects," a new  Rasmussen poll reported Thursday.
 
Rasmussen found that 58 percent of  Americans were opposed to an investigation. Democrats were evenly divided on the  issue, but 77 percent of Republicans and 62 percent of unaffiliated voters were  against further inquiry. 
Other pollsters and polling analysts surveyed by  The Washington Times said they sensed relatively little support for reopening  the issue to further scrutiny in the midst of a severe recession, especially  with polls showing Americans putting terrorism at the top of their list of  national security concerns. 
"I don't have the sense that people are that  riled up about it. People see the economy front and center above everything,"  said Tom Baxter, editor of the Atlanta-based Insider Advantage polling group.  
Bernie Porn, president of EPIC/MRA polling in Lansing, Mich., agreed.  
"People are just so wrapped up with our economic problems here that I'm not  sure they are excited by the interrogation issue, at least not right now," he  said. 
Others said Americans were wary that further investigation could turn  into a partisan political fight to settle old scores. 
"People want  investigations when they think a law has been broken," said Karlyn H. Bowman, a  veteran analyst of polling trends at the American Enterprise Institute. "But  when the question even hints, as many do, that an investigation is political  point-scoring, people generally say it isn't warranted." 
American views  about torture have changed in recent years. A Newsweek poll in November 2005  found that 58 percent supported torture "if it might lead to the prevention of a  major terrorist attack." 
But Gary Langer, director of polling at ABC News,  noted in his blog on abcnews.com Thursday that his last poll on the issue in  January showed that 58 percent "favored Obama's position prohibiting the use of  torture under any circumstances - while 40 percent again said therre are cases  in which it should be considered." 
Frank Newport, editor-in-chief of the  Gallup Poll, said he will release the results of a new poll on Monday that asked  Americans "whether people think what was done was justified or not, and should  it be investigated?" 
washingtontimes. com