The Philippine Star

Rody satisfacti­on, trust ratings down

- By HELEN FLORES

President Duterte’s net satisfacti­on and trust ratings suffered double-digit drops in the third quarter of the year amid criticisms over his brutal war on drugs, the third quarter survey of Social Weather Stations (SWS) showed.

Six in 10 Filipinos or 67 percent of adult Filipinos said they were satisfied with Duterte while 19 percent were dissatisfi­ed, resulting in a net satisfacti­on score of “good” +48.

UN attributes killing of 14 kids to AFP, PNP. Story on Page 8.

The remaining 14 percent of 1,500 respondent­s were undecided, the pollster said.

These were the biggest drops in Duterte’s ratings since he assumed power. SWS gave no explanatio­n for the fall, but the survey was taken amid criticism of the recent killings of teenagers related to the war on drugs.

The uncommissi­oned poll was conducted nationwide from Sept. 23 to 27, using face-to-face interviews of 1,500 adults 18 years old and above.

Duterte’s latest net satisfacti­on rating was 18 points below the “very good” +66 he obtained in June (78 percent satisfied, 12 percent dissatisfi­ed) last June.

His net trust rating fell 15 points to a “very good” +60 (73 percent with much trust, 12

percent with little trust) from an “excellent” +75 (82 percent much trust, seven percent little trust) in June.

The SWS classifies net satisfacti­on and net trust ratings as +70 and above, “excellent;” +50 to +69, “very good;” +30 to +49, “good;” +10 to +29, “moderate;” +9 to -9, “neutral;” -10 to -29, “poor;” -30 to -49, “bad;” -50 to -69, “very bad;” -70 and below, “execrable.”

Duterte’s net satisfacti­on rating from June to September fell by 30 points in the Visayas, 22 points in balance Luzon, and 19 points in Metro Manila, while it was steady in his home region Mindanao.

It stayed “excellent” in Mindanao, at +76 (82 percent satisfied, six percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, hardly moving from +75 (83 percent satisfied, eight percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

However, it dropped by two grades from excellent to good in the Visayas, at +43 (64 percent satisfied, 21 percent dissatisfi­ed), down by 30 points from +73 (83 percent satisfied, 10 percent dissatisfi­ed).

It fell by one grade from very good to good in balance Luzon, at +36 (59 percent satisfied, 23 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 22 points from +58 (73 percent satisfied, 15 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It also fell by a grade from very good to good in Metro Manila, at +44 (68 percent satisfied, 24 percent dissatisfi­ed), down by 19 points from +63 (77 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

In urban areas, it fell by one grade from very good to good, at +48 (68 percent satisfied, 20 percent dissatisfi­ed) in the third quarter, down by 20 points from +68 (79 percent satisfied, 11 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

Rural net satisfacti­on also fell by a grade from very good to good, at +47 (65 percent satisfied, 18 percent dissatisfi­ed), down by 16 points from +63 (77 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed).

With regard to socio-economic class, the President’s net satisfacti­on rating stayed very good in class ABC, at +57 (70 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed), down by two points from +59 (65 percent satisfied, six percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

However, it plunged by one grade from very good to good in class D or the masa, at +49 (68 percent satisfied, 18 percent dissatisfi­ed), 17 points below his +66 (78 percent satisfied, 12 percent dissatisfi­ed) score in June.

It also dropped by one grade from very good to good in class E, at +35 (61 percent satisfied, 26 percent dissatisfi­ed), down by 32 points from +67 (80 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

Duterte’s net satisfacti­on rating fell by a grade from very good to good among men, at +49 (68 percent satisfied, 19 percent dissatisfi­ed), 14 points down from +63 (77 percent satisfied, 14 percent dissatisfi­ed) in the second quarter.

It also fell by one grade from very good to good among women, at +46 (65 percent satisfied, 19 percent dissatisfi­ed), down 23 points from +69 (79 percent satisfied, 11 percent dissatisfi­ed).

The President obtained “very good” net satisfacti­on rating among 25-34 and 4554, and good among all other age groups.

Duterte’s net satisfacti­on rating stayed very good among 25-34 year olds, at +53 (70 percent satisfied, 17 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, although down by 14 points from +67 (79 percent satisfied, 11 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It also stayed very good among 45-54 year olds, at +53 (70 percent satisfied, 18 percent dissatisfi­ed), despite a five point drop from +58 (75 percent satisfied, 16 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It dropped by one grade from very good to good among those 55 years old and older, at +45 (64 percent satisfied, 19 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 23 points from +68 (78 percent satisfied, 10 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It fell by one grade from very good to good among 35-44 year olds, at +45 (66 percent satisfied, 21 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 27 points from +72 (82 percent satisfied, 10 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It was down by one grade from very good to good among 18-24 year olds, at +40 (63 percent satisfied, 23 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 19 points from +59 (75 percent satisfied, 16 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

Duterte’s net satisfacti­on rating remained very good among high school graduates, at +56 (72 percent satisfied, 16 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June 2017, despite the six-point drop from +62 (75 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It fell by two grades from excellent to good among college graduates, at +48 (67 percent satisfied, 19 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 28 points from +76 (83 percent satisfied, eight percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It was down one grade from very good to good among elementary school graduates, at +38 (61 percent satisfied, 23 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 28 points from +66 (79 percent satisfied, 13 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

It also dropped by one grade from very good to good among non-elementary school graduates, at +41 (61 percent satisfied, 20 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September, down by 27 points from +68 (80 percent satisfied, 12 percent dissatisfi­ed) in June.

The survey has sampling error margins of plus or minus 2.5 percent for national percentage­s.

‘Heed survey on EJKs’

Meanwhile, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) said the latest results of the SWS survey on extrajudic­ial killings (EJKs) should be heeded by the government.

The CHR said there was a growing awareness among the public that the drug war was becoming a war on the poor, with “mostly poor drug suspects being killed” while rich and powerful suspects are getting spared.

“With the Philippine National Police’s pronouncem­ent that there is no single case of extrajudic­ial killing under the current administra­tion, the CHR insists that EJK encompasse­s any killing by government forces as well as killings by any other groups or individual­s which the government fails to investigat­e, prosecute and punish when it is in a position to do so, as defined by former UN special rapporteur Philip Alston,” the CHR said in a statement.

“Limiting the definition of EJK based only on a focused operationa­l definition provided in the Administra­tive Order 35 would discount killings that are also perpetrate­d by state agents and non-state actors that remain uninvestig­ated,” it said.

The CHR noted that thousands of deaths have been reported to be committed by both vigilante and police personnel during anti-illegal drug operations.

 ?? BOY SANTOS ?? Soldiers wounded in the Marawi siege salute as the national anthem is sung prior to a concert for their benefit at the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s Medical Center theater on Saturday. The AFP said the Marawi conflict will be over in a week. Story on...
BOY SANTOS Soldiers wounded in the Marawi siege salute as the national anthem is sung prior to a concert for their benefit at the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s Medical Center theater on Saturday. The AFP said the Marawi conflict will be over in a week. Story on...

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