who do you think is the greatest president ? poll reveals some interesting answers

AR182

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Nov 9, 2000
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some interesting results. unfortunately, some of the people are not aware of their own history.



POLL ANALYSES
May 16, 2003


Honest Abe, JFK Among Greatest U.S. Presidents
Partisanship, age, education shape attitudes on who is the greatest U.S. president


by Joseph Carroll
GALLUP NEWS SERVICE

PRINCETON, NJ -- An Unfinished Life, historian Robert Dallek's new book about the life of President John F. Kennedy, was released this week. The book, among other things, illustrates the gravity of Kennedy's medical problems, describes an alleged affair with a White House intern, and speculates about how Kennedy would have handled the Vietnam War. The publication of this new Kennedy biography raises the question of where Kennedy ranks in the eyes of Americans.

Lincoln, Kennedy Have Slight Edge on Greatest U.S. President This Year

An April CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll asked Americans: "Who do you regard as the greatest United States president?"

Abraham Lincoln gets the most mentions from Americans at 15%, but not by a significant margin over the second-place finisher, Kennedy (13%). Two recent presidents, Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan, as well as the current president, are all mentioned by 10% or more of the public. Other presidents earning mentions from more than 5% of the public include Franklin D. Roosevelt and George Washington.

Gallup has asked this question four times since 1999, and over that period, Lincoln and Kennedy have typically rated near the top of the list. In 1999, Lincoln had a six-percentage-point lead over Washington, Kennedy, Reagan, and Clinton. Kennedy led the pack the next year, with a small four-percentage-point lead over Lincoln. Polling in 2001 and 2003 has found no clear-cut victor among the presidents mentioned, but Lincoln and Kennedy still appear near the top of the list. Reagan, with 18%, actually had the most mentions in 2001, probably due in part to the fact that the poll was conducted around celebrations of his 90th birthday.

Who do you regard as the greatest United States president?

Apr 5-6,
2003
Feb 9-11,
2001
Feb 14-15,
2000
Feb
1999

%
%
%
%

Abraham Lincoln
15
14
18
18

John Kennedy
13
16
22
12

Bill Clinton
11
9
5
12

George W. Bush
11
--
--
--

Ronald Reagan
10
18
11
12

Franklin Roosevelt
9
6
12
9

George Washington
7
5
5
12

Harry Truman
4
6
3
4

Jimmy Carter
3
4
3
3

Theodore Roosevelt
2
2
3
3

George Bush (the elder)
2
3
3
5

Thomas Jefferson
2
1
3
2

Dwight Eisenhower
1
1
3
2

Richard Nixon
1
1
2
2


Other
2
5
3
1

None
1
2
*
1

No opinion
6
7
4
2


2000-2001 questions asked of half sample.


Republicans, Democrats Vary Substantially on Greatest U.S. President

The latest polling finds dramatic (but not necessarily surprising) differences between the Republicans' and Democrats' choices for the greatest president in history. Three Democratic presidents -- Kennedy (25%), Clinton (21%), and Franklin Roosevelt (13%) -- are Democrats' most frequent choices as the greatest president. Lincoln is the only Republican president identified by a large number of Democrats, with 9% saying he is the greatest president.

Among Republicans in this poll, 23% mention the current president. Lincoln is mentioned by 20%, 18% mention Reagan, and 9% mention Washington. No more than 3% of Republicans nominate any Democratic president as the greatest of all time.

Independents have a more mixed view, with Lincoln, Kennedy, Clinton, and Franklin Roosevelt each getting between 11% and 16% of the votes.

Republicans
Independents
Democrats

%
%
%

Abraham Lincoln
20
16
9

John Kennedy
3
13
25

Bill Clinton
2
12
21

George W. Bush
23
6
3

Ronald Reagan
18
8
3

Franklin Roosevelt
3
11
13

George Washington
9
8
4

Harry Truman
3
5
3

Jimmy Carter
1
3
6

Theodore Roosevelt
2
3
2

George H.W. Bush
3
2
*

Thomas Jefferson
1
2
2

Dwight Eisenhower
2
1
*

Richard Nixon
2
1
--


Age Impacts Vote for Greatest President in U.S. History

There are interesting and significant differences in choice of greatest U.S. president by age. Americans tend to select a leader from the formative years of their generation. The only exceptions, once again, are Washington and Lincoln, who rank fairly high among people in all age groups despite the fact that both served long before any person living today was born.

Clinton is far and away the most likely to be selected as the greatest president among 18- to 29-year-olds; nearly 3 in 10 respondents in this age group mention him. Younger Americans are at least three times more likely than any other age group to cite Clinton as the best president. Lincoln and the current President Bush each get 10% of the mentions from people in the 18- to 29-year-old age group, getting only about one-third of the mentions Clinton does among younger Americans.

Americans aged 30 to 49 are essentially divided in their opinions on the greatest president, but Reagan, who was in office when these people were mainly in their teens, 20s, and 30s, is more likely to be mentioned by this age group than any others. Lincoln, Kennedy, and Reagan are essentially tied, with just about one in six mentioning them. Twelve percent mention the current president.

One in five Americans between the ages of 50 and 64 mention Kennedy as the greatest president, significantly more than in any other age group. Those in this age bracket also hold Lincoln in high regard.

For Americans aged 65 and older, Franklin Roosevelt and Lincoln are essentially tied as the greatest U.S. president, named by 19% and 17%, respectively. Also scoring high among this age group are the current President Bush, Harry Truman, and Kennedy.

18- to 29-
year-olds
30- to 49-
year-olds
50- to 64-
year-olds
65 and
older

%
%
%
%

Abraham Lincoln
10
16
17
17

John Kennedy
7
14
21
10

Bill Clinton
29
8
8
6

George W. Bush
10
12
9
12

Ronald Reagan
7
14
8
8

Franklin Roosevelt
4
6
10
19

George Washington
8
6
8
5

Harry Truman
2
2
4
10

Jimmy Carter
2
4
3
1

Theodore Roosevelt
5
2
3
1

George H.W. Bush
3
3
*
*

Thomas Jefferson
1
2
2
*

Dwight Eisenhower
1
1
1
1

Richard Nixon
--
2
*
1


Higher Educated Americans Pick Lincoln as Greatest U.S. President

"Honest Abe" is the top choice as the greatest U.S. president among Americans with college degrees or postgraduate education. Roughly one in five adults with degrees in higher education pick Lincoln as the greatest president, while fewer Americans with only some college or a high school diploma or less mention Lincoln.

No other president comes close to Lincoln among adults with a college degree or postgraduate education. Reagan, Franklin Roosevelt, and Kennedy trail Lincoln, each mentioned by roughly 1 in 10 Americans at these levels of education.

Those with some college or a high school diploma or less show no consensus as to the greatest president.


Post-
graduate education

College graduate only

Some college education
High school diploma or less

%
%
%
%

Abraham Lincoln
20
21
13
13

John Kennedy
11
12
13
15

Bill Clinton
5
6
13
14

George W. Bush
5
8
9
16

Ronald Reagan
12
8
12
10

Franklin Roosevelt
12
11
7
8

George Washington
7
8
8
5

Harry Truman
4
4
4
3

Jimmy Carter
3
4
3
2

Theodore Roosevelt
2
2
4
2

George H.W. Bush
2
3
2
2

Thomas Jefferson
5
4
1
*

Dwight Eisenhower
*
2
1
1

Richard Nixon
1
--
2
1


Survey Methods

These results are based on telephone interviews with a randomly selected national sample of 1,009 adults, aged 18 and older, conducted April 5-6, 2003. For results based on this sample, one can say with 95%confidence that the maximum error attributable to sampling and other random effects is ?3 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
Im trying to remember what good old Abe did so well. We only lost 606000 men in the war. Maybe it's because he got shot. Hm Kennedy did to. I would like to think the best one ever has not been elected yet. That would gives us all hope.
 

bjfinste

Registered User
Forum Member
Mar 14, 2001
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0
AZ
I'm 24 and only remember a few of these, but from what I've learned through HS and college, I cannot fathom how any of the presidents of the last 25-30 years could possibly be chosen ahead of FDR.
 

SixFive

bonswa
Forum Member
Mar 12, 2001
18,897
343
83
54
BG, KY, USA
I think it's interesting how there is partisanship with the older presidents between the Democrats and Republicans voting now. The Democratic part my grandfather and his father were staunch supporters of is vastly different that the Democratic party of today. The parties have just about flip-flopped in the last 80 years.

I don't think Lincoln could have prevented the Civil War, do any of you?

I like Teddy Roosevelt, I'd probably pick him. Hard to go wrong with FDR too.

I don't know how great a president JFK was. Too bad he didn't have a chance to finish the term out, his assassination was a great American tragedy.
 

AR182

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Nov 9, 2000
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i would have to choose fdr & lincoln to be our greatest presidents.


fdr,

because he became president during the depression, & developed programs (new deal) to create jobs for the american people. also was the pres.who successfully ( with a big asset from churchill) fought 2 wars at the same time.

lincoln,

no, i don't think he could have stopped the civil war, but he stood up to the confederacy & prevented the us from breaking up, & of course stopped slavery.


i think my favorite president was truman because he became pres. after fdr died & had to over come the constant comparisons to such a popular pres.he was a big underdog. he showed real guts by approving the dropping of a-bombs to end the war against japan, & saved what is estimated to be 500,000 american lives.
 
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