Americans want charges against BP
Poll: Americans want charges against BP
Oil giant and federal government get negative ratings on spill response
Slideshow |
Oil spill disaster in the Gulf Following a deadly oil rig explosion, crews attempt to contain an underwater oil well gushing thousands of gallons a day, fouling the water and coastline. |
Video |
Florida beaches open amid cleanup June 5: Along the beaches of the Florida Panhandle, workers and angry residents are picking up tar balls and cleaning up oil. NBC’s Mark Potter reports. Nightly News |
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Obama meets with business owners affected by spill June 5: On his third trip to Louisiana since the oil spill began, President Obama kept the heat on BP, while at the same time trying to cool the anger of Gulf residents. Nightly News |
Americans overwhelmingly see the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico
as a major environmental disaster, and most want the federal government to pursue criminal charges against BP and its drilling partners, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.
Public complaints against BP are twofold: Most give poor ratings to its reaction to the massive spill, and most blame the company and its drilling partners for taking unnecessary risks that could have caused the spill.
But the government itself is also in the line of fire. More Americans have given negative ratings to federal reaction to the BP spill
then poll respondents gave to the government's initial handling of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Overall, 69 percent of those polled now say the government has done a "not so good" or "poor" job handling the spill. More polled, 81 percent, give low marks to BP for its response. (Some 59 percent give negative ratings to both thefederal government
and BP.)
Criticism of the government and BP crosses party lines and spans the country. The Democratic discontent with the government's response today — 56 percent give it low marks — contrasts with majority GOP support for federal efforts a few weeks after Katrina stuck in 2005.
Another sentiment shared across the partisan divide is the rising feeling that the situation in the Gulf represents a major environmental disaster. About three-quarters of those polled now say so, up significantly from a Pew poll last month.
In the new Post-ABC poll, those who see the spill as a disaster overwhelmingly advocate criminal charges against BP and its partners, and altogether 64 percent of Americans say the government should pursue such legal action. Most Democrats (74 percent) and independents (67 percent) support criminal investigation; Republicans divide 50 percent in favor, 44 percent opposed.
The poll was conducted June 3 to 6 among a random national sample of 1,004 adults. The results from the full poll have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.
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