Less than a month before Obama takes office in the teeth of the worst economic slump since the 1930s, a new CNN/Opinion Research survey found 82% of respondents approve of how he is handling his transition to power.
Obama's rating is higher than President George W. Bush's corresponding figure of 65% after the disputed 2000 election and higher than the 67% posted by Bill Clinton in 1992.
The poll was taken between Friday and Sunday, at the end of a period in which Obama has rolled out a high profile cabinet line-up and hosted almost daily press conferences as economic turmoil deepens.
"Barack Obama is having a better honeymoon with the American public than any incoming president in the past three decades," said CNN polling director Keating Holland on the news channel's Web site.
"He's putting up better numbers, usually by double digits, than Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan, or either George Bush on every item traditionally measured in transition polls."
The survey also found that 56% of those asked backed Obama's plans for a huge stimulus package to ignite the crisis-hit economy, with 42% against.
The president-elect was spending Christmas Eve at a beach side compound in Hawaii with his family, a day after paying tribute to his grandmother Madelyn Dunham, who helped raise him, but died aged 86 two days before he was elected in November.
The president-elect attended a private memorial for Dunham, whom he knew affectionately as "Toot" at a Honolulu church on Tuesday before her ashes were scattered by family and friends at an ocean overlook.
Despite his vacation, Obama on Wednesday was looking ahead to the grave challenges he will face after he is sworn in as president on Jan. 20.
In a holiday radio and online video address, he exhorted the U.S. people to unite in a new sense of national purpose to pull their nation out of its economic chasm.
The CNN poll seemed to indicate that public satisfaction with Obama hasn't been harmed by the distraction of the scandal over the Illinois Democratic governor's alleged bid to sell off the president-elect's former Senate seat.
An internal report on Tuesday cleared Obama and top aides of any improper contacts with accused governor Rod Blagojevich, who is facing corruption charges.
The case trained a spotlight on the tainted history of Illinois politics, where Obama made his name and tested his campaign vow of transparent leadership.
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Publié le 24 Décembre 2008 Copyright © 2008 Dowjones




