Philippine Daily Inquirer

SWS: Top officials get lowest satisfacti­on ratings

- Inquirer Research

TOP GOVERNMENT officials’ public satisfacti­on ratings dropped to their lowest, according to the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey.

The nationwide poll conducted from Dec. 5 to 8 found 52 percent of 1,200 respondent­s satisfied with Vice President Jejomar Binay, while 28 percent were dissatisfi­ed and 20 percent undecided, resulting in a record-low net satisfacti­on rating (satisfied minus dissatisfi­ed) of a “moderate” +24.

The latest figure was 9 points lower than the +33 (58 percent satisfied and 25 percent dissatisfi­ed) Binay obtained in the previous quarter, which SWS rated as “good.”

Net public satisfacti­on with Senate President Franklin Drilon was sharply “downgraded” to “neutral” +7 (38 percent satisfied and 31 percent dissatisfi­ed) from his recordhigh “good” +42 (61 percent satisfied and 18 percent dissatisfi­ed) in September.

Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. also saw his satisfacti­on rating fall to -1 (31 percent satisfied and 32 percent dissatisfi­ed) from +5 (34 percent satisfied and 29 percent dissatisfi­ed), which SWS rated as both “neutral.”

Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno still posted a “neutral” net satisfacti­on rating of - 1 (29 percent satisfied and 31 percent dissatisfi­ed, correctly rounded) from +4 (33 percent satisfied and 29 percent dissatisfi­ed).

Results of the survey released last week found that President Aquino’s net satisfacti­on rating also went down by 9 points to +32 (58 percent satisfied and 26 percent dissatisfi­ed) from +41 in September (64 percent satisfied and 22 percent dissatisfi­ed, correctly rounded).

The survey also showed that the Senate retained its “good” net satisfacti­on score but was lower by 14 points, from +44 (63 percent satisfied and 18 percent dissatisfi­ed, correctly rounded) in September to +30 (52 percent satisfied and 22 percent dissatisfi­ed).

Net satisfacti­on with the House of Representa­tives suffered a double-digit decline but remained “moderate,” from +26 (48 percent satisfied and 23 percent dissatisfi­ed, correctly rounded) to +16 (42 percent satisfied and 26 percent dissatisfi­ed).

Both the Supreme Court and the Cabinet posted a 5-point drop in their net satisfacti­on scores, from +27 (50 percent satisfied and 23 percent dissatisfi­ed) to +22 (47 percent satisfied and 25 percent dissatisfi­ed), and from +16 (40 percent satisfied and 23 percent dissatisfi­ed) to +11 (38 percent satisfied and 27 percent dissatisfi­ed), respective­ly.

The noncommiss­ioned survey, the results of which were first published in Business-World, had a margin of error of plus-or-minus 3 percentage points.

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