| Source: finance.yahoo.com
 
  Throw the bums out.     That's the message 60 percent of  Americans are sending to Washington in a new NBC News/Wall Street  Journal poll, saying if they had the chance to vote to defeat and  replace every single member of Congress, including their own  representative, they would. Just 35 percent say they would not.
     The 60 percent figure is the highest-ever in that question recorded in  the poll, registered in the wake of the government shutdown and threat  of the U.S. defaulting on its debt for the first time in history. If the  nation's debt limit is not increased one week from now, Treasury  Secretary Jack Lew warns that the entire global economy could be in  peril.     (Read more:  No deal yet, but offer by GOP on debt shifts the tone )     "We continue to use this number as a way to sort of understand how much  revulsion there is," said Democratic pollster Peter D. Hart, who  conducted the poll with Republican Bill McInturff. "We now have a new  high-water mark."     The numbers reflect a broader trend over the  last few years. Americans have traditionally said that while they might  not like Congress, they usually like their own representatives. But that  sentiment appears to have shifted.     The throw-them-all-out  attitude has slowly taken hold over the last three years, coinciding  with two things - the rise of the Tea Party caucus in the House and the  debt ceiling fight of 2011.     In October 2010, a majority of  Americans - 50 percent to 47 percent - said they would not fire all  congressional members. But by August 2011, 54 percent said they would  toss every lawmaker from office; in January 2012, 56 percent said that;  and just three months ago, in July, it was 57 percent.     Frustration was evident among poll respondents across the ideological spectrum.
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     "You look at 800,000 people being out of work merely because Congress  can't come to an agreement to do their job, which we sent them there to  do," said a respondent from Mississippi, a strong Democrat. "I am  prayerful for a revolution."
    The sentiment isn't limited to  Democrats. One Ohio woman, who considers herself a strong Republican,  said her husband is a federal worker and they are worried about paying  the bills.
    "We will not get a paycheck," she said. "It is  federal pay and mortgage is due. Who is going to pay that - Obama or  Congress who is still getting paid?"     Hart points out that the seeds are there to give rise to independent or third-party candidates.
    (Read more:  Why it's 'incredibly treacherous' to trade right now )    According to Hart, "Somewhere, someone's going to pick up and run with the 'throw them all out'" banner.
     The number of Americans who say they want to fire everyone is fairly  consistent among most groups - at around 60 percent - but it spikes  among rural voters (70 percent), white independents (70 percent) and  those in Republican-held congressional districts (67 percent). Just 52  percent of respondents in Democratic-held districts would vote to fire  every lawmaker on Capitol Hill.
    In another sign of  dissatisfaction with the state of politics, 47 percent of Americans said  they do not strongly identify with either party.      The numbers in this poll also reflect a broader anger and pessimism among Americans, especially when it comes to the economy.
     A record-low 14 percent think the country is headed in the right  direction, down from 30 percent last month. That's the biggest  single-month drop in the poll since the shutdown of 1990. And a whopping  78 percent think the country is on the wrong track. Just 17 percent  think the economy will improve in the next year, while 42 percent think  it will worsen.     Americans' confidence in the economy has  nose-dived, they say, because of President Barack Obama and  congressional Republicans' negotiations - or lack thereof - on the  budget. Almost two in three - 63 percent - say it makes them less  confident that the economy will get better.
    (Read more:  Hopes of US deal rise as shutdown enters 11th day )     "What these numbers tell us is that the already-shaken public - this  kicked the stool out from under them," Bill McInturff said. "We're  seeing numbers that are associated with historic lows in public  confidence."     Almost two-thirds - 65 percent - also say the  government shutdown is having quite a bit or a great deal of harm on the  U.S. economy.
    "That linkage between these actions in  Washington and economic confidence and what that means for trying to  stabilize our economy, I think at a big-picture level [shows] how  destabilizing" the standoff has been for the economy.
     Democratic pollster Fred Yang, who helped conduct the poll with Hart,  added that Americans are paying attention to this fight and want it  resolved before the debt ceiling deadline of Oct. 17.
    "This isn't the calm before the storm," Yang said. "This is the storm before the storm."     -By Domenico Montanaro of NBC News |