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Poll: Two-thirds of Americans Want New Impeachment Review
NewsMax.com
December 21, 1999

NEW YORK—A NewsMax.com/Zogby International poll finds that two-thirds of
Americans want Congress to consider a second round of impeachment proceedings
against Bill Clinton for possibly swapping United States military secrets to
China in exchange for campaign cash.
Americans overwhelmingly indicated they are seriously concerned that
President Clinton may have authorized the sale and transfer of nuclear and
ballistic missile technology to China. The national survey of 1,005
registered voters was conducted by NewsMax.com/Zogby last week.

The NewsMax.com/Zogby poll comes on the heels of a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll
released last week that found that 50 percent of Americans now approve of
Congress’ impeachment of Clinton in December of 1998 after the Monica
Lewinsky scandal.

Americans apparently take the China allegations more seriously.

Since 1996, federal law enforcement and congressional sources have claimed
that large amounts of money — some estimates place the amount as high as $10
million — were funneled from Chinese government sources to help the
Democratic National Committee fund Bill Clinton’s re-election campaign in
1996.

Nearly 10 percent of Americans surveyed said the allegations were serious
enough that Congress should immediately convene impeachment hearings against
the President.

Another 56 percent of Americans said Congress should begin a preliminary
investigation to decide if impeachment is warranted.

In 1998, the House of Representatives impeached the President. He avoided
removal from office when the Senate decided not to convict him after a brief
trial in 1999.

Support for a fresh look at a possible Chinagate impeachment inquiry,
however, enjoys broad support from Democrats, Republicans and Independent
voters. African-American voters, considered among the president’s staunchest
supporters, also backed the popular impeachment examination by 63 percent.

Concerns about the President’s treatment of China and military transfers to
the communist country have simmered for several years.

In 1996, the New York Times reported that U.S. defense contractors Hughes
Electronics and Loral Space & Communications assisted China in developing and
improving the launch capabilities of their ballistic missiles. After a
grand-jury investigation was convened to investigate Loral’s transfer of
classified technology to China, President Clinton moved to authorize the
transfer of such technology.

Since 1993, the chairman of Loral, Bernard Schwartz, donated more than $1
million to the DNC, making Schwartz the committee’s largest donor.

The Clinton administration has also moved to issue more than 350 waivers,
largely beginning in 1996, to transfer American supercomputers to China.
Previous to Clinton’s authorizations, China had received few clearances
because the computers could be used to develop advanced nuclear weaponry.

Recently, ABC News reported that the Clinton administration authorized the
sale of an ultra-high-speed IBM computer the network claimed would enable
China to develop its nuclear-carrying ballistic missiles.

President Clinton has made technology transfers of previously classified
technology a priority. Early in Clinton’s first term, administration
officials changed the screening process for technology transfers, moving the
approval process away from the State and Defense Departments to the Commerce
Department. The move was said to have increased the flow of technology
transfers to China.

Chinagate figure John Huang, who had been a major Clinton fund-raiser, also
served in the Commerce Department. Congressional investigators believed Huang
served as an agent of China, using ties through his previous employer, the
Riady family of Indonesia.

NEWSMAX.COM/ZOGBY POLL

Question: Allegations have risen that Bill Clinton traded U.S. nuclear and
ballistic missile technology to the Chinese for campaign contributions.
Should Congress convene impeachment hearings against President Bill Clinton
over these allegations or should there be a preliminary investigation to see
if there is a reason to start impeachment proceedings, or should Congress do
nothing? Congress should:

1. Convene impeachment proceedings — 10 percent

2. Begin a preliminary investigation for impeachment — 56 percent

3. Do nothing — 30 percent

4. Not sure — 4 percent.










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