|         How would you answer this poll question: "American automakers produce        or sell dozens of car models that achieve over 35 miles per gallon but are        not made available to consumers here in the United States. Do you think        Detroit carmakers should be encouraged to make available here at home the        more fuel-efficient cars they are currently only selling abroad?" If        you're like most of America, you'd say "yes."        WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Will the Big 3 automakers blow it        for a second time by misreading an American public that is expecting        gasoline prices to start soaring again soon? As President Bush and        Congress continue to huddle with Detroit vehicle manufacturers, a strong        and bipartisan 78 percent of Americans want Washington to impose a 40 mile        per gallon (MPG) fuel-efficiency standard for American vehicles, according        to a new Opinion Research Corporation (ORC) national opinion survey to be        released on November 21, 2006 by the nonprofit and nonpartisan Civil        Society Institute (CSI).         Other key findings of the ORC survey include the        following: * Nine out of 10 Americans expect gas prices to go up "in the near future," with nearly half (46 percent) "definitely" expecting a resumption of higher fuel prices. * 70 percent of Americans are not turning their back on fuel-efficiency concerns and say that they are factoring "expected future gasoline price increases into consideration in thinking about buying a new vehicle." * Temporarily lower gasoline prices are not sending large numbers of Americans rushing back to gas-guzzling SUV and trucks. In fact, nearly half (45 percent) of Americans are now more likely to buy a "hybrid or other fuel-efficient vehicle" than they were six months ago, compared to 30 percent who are unchanged in their plans and fewer than one in four (24 percent) who are less likely to make such a vehicle purchase.  | 
(VIA  autobloggreen.com)