SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (9499)1/23/2006 12:11:49 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 541671
 
"Kennedy bumps Roosevelt from top of Presidential Greatness Scale

New Zogby International poll shows Reagan in third place; Ford, Johnson ‘most mediocre’; Nixon a ‘failure’

President Kennedy, enjoying a surge of fresh popularity among Americans who have rated him the greatest President of the modern era, surged past Franklin D. Roosevelt for the first time since early 2002, a new Zogby International poll shows.

Roosevelt usually tops the Zogby Presidential Greatness Scale, but Kennedy has rebounded nicely after hitting a low point in 1997, when the American news media was filled with stories of Presidential peccadilloes during the Bill Clinton/Monica Lewinsky affair. Also aiding Kennedy’s numbers: Americans who have a personal memory of the Roosevelt presidency are dwindling.

Ronald Reagan held third place, rounding out a trio of former Commanders in Chief who continue to stand head-and-shoulders above other colleagues in the eyes of their countrymen. Reagan, who died in June, 2004, retained the big gains he made in the survey following his death, enshrining him well above fourth-place Harry Truman, the only President to authorize the use of a nuclear bomb and, in doing so, presided over the end of World War II.

Kennedy was rated as “great” or “near-great” by 73% of those surveyed by Zogby, compared to 71% who felt the same way about Roosevelt. Reagan was rated as “great” or “near great” by 63% of respondents.

Respondents have lower opinions of the five Presidents still living, the survey shows. Clinton is rated the highest, at 45%, followed by George H.W. Bush (33%), Carter (32%), George W. Bush (31%), and Ford (17%).

The current president carries a high negative rating, as 40% said his performance has been either below average or a failure. Clinton suffered much the same negative effect when he was in office, and those negative opinions of the Clinton years have only recently started to soften. As late as 2003, 39% said they considered him a below average or failed president.

Nixon, the only person ever to have resigned from the presidency, maintains the worst negative rating of any modern president, with 47% saying he was below average (27%) or a failure (20%).




Great or
Near Great


Average


Below Average/
Failure

Kennedy


73%


20%


3%

Roosevelt


71%


15%


2%

Reagan


63%


24%


12%

Truman


51%


29%


2%

Eisenhower


47%


34%


4%

Clinton


45%


32%


23%

G.H.W. Bush


33%


45%


20%

Carter


32%


40%


11%

G.W. Bush


31%


28%


40%

Johnson


20%


47%


24%

Ford


17%


58%


11%

Nixon


15%


35%


47%

Two presidents who are widely considered by respondents to be kings of mediocrity include Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas and Gerald Ford of Michigan. While just 17% rated Ford’s presidency “great” or “near great”, 58% said he was an “average” president, and 11% thought he was less than average. Twenty percent said Johnson was “great” or “near great”, and 47% said he was average, while one in four said he was below average or a failure.

The pair shared more than mediocre poll ratings. They both came to the executive branch after long and successful careers in the U.S. Congress, and they both ascended to the presidency not by election, but by vacancies created by assassination and scandal.

Johnson was elevated to the presidency hours after the murder of President Kennedy, presided over the Vietnam War that lost so much public support that he opted not to run for re-election in 1968, but also championed civil rights legislation. Ford took over after Nixon resigned, but had difficulty overcoming resentment from those who disagreed with his decision to pardon Nixon of any and all crimes possibly committed against the nation.

The Zogby International telephone survey included 1,031 interviews between Jan. 9 and Jan. 12, 2006, and carries a margin of error of +/- 3.1 percentage points.

(1/18/2006) "
zogby.com



To: Lane3 who wrote (9499)1/23/2006 12:17:57 PM
From: epicure  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 541671
 
Not if you enter because you had no good choice to refuse- as used to be the case with eating out. Forcing someone to choose between staying home, or eating out and getting smoke blown at them, is no choice, and there is no consent.