USA TODAY US Edition

Americans split on Obama’s legacy

Depending on whom you ask, Obamacare is a triumph or debacle

- Susan Page @susanpage USA TODAY

Americans in a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll rate the Affordable Care Act as President Obama’s greatest achievemen­t in the White House. Also as his biggest failure.

In yet another sign of how po- larized the USA remains, the signature initiative known as Obamacare draws the strongest praise from his supporters and the sharpest rebuke from his critics as Americans begin to consider how history will judge the nation’s 44th president.

On one thing there is agreement across partisan lines: Six in 10 predict incoming President Donald Trump will significan­tly dismantle Obama’s legacy. Three- fourths of Democrats call that a bad thing; three-fourths of Republican­s call it a good one.

“The impression he pushed was that he wanted to undo everything on Day One, somehow, miraculous­ly,” says Megan Glidewell, 37, a college counselor from Waconia, Minn., who voted for Hillary Clinton. She was among those called in the poll. “I know that’s not how it works, but it certainly felt like what he wanted and what the people who voted for him wanted.”

About a third of those surveyed say Obama ultimately will be seen as a “good” president; 18% say he’ll be a “great” one. One in four say history will rate him as only “fair,” and another one in four say he’ll be seen as a “failed” president.

The split by party is predictabl­y stark: 86% of Democrats say Obama will be judged to have been a good or great president; 83% of Republican­s say he will be seen as a fair or failed one.

“There was a lot of hope but a lot of under-delivery with him,” says David Ockrim, 30, who operates a Yankee Doodle Dandy food truck in New York City.

“A total failure,” scoffs Stephen Spence, 69, of Mesa, Ariz. “On the economy, on immigratio­n, on helping people from other countries that are fighting ISIS.”

“I think history would judge him well, but it’s probably going to take a while,” says Queen Jones, 73, a retired teacher’s assistant from Mount Pleasant, N.C. “I think he’ll be judged well because of what he inherited when he came in and where the economy is right now.”

Obama is leaving office with healthy ratings. By 55%-40%, Americans have a favorable opinion of him. That’s much better than Trump’s ratings — 41% favorable, 46% unfavorabl­e — although the president-elect’s standing has been improving. Just before Election Day, in late October, Trump was at 31% favorable, 61% unfavorabl­e in the poll.

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 ?? ANDREW HARNIK, AP ?? President Obama waves after a news conference Dec. 16.
ANDREW HARNIK, AP President Obama waves after a news conference Dec. 16.

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