Angus Reid Global Monitor : Polls & Research

President Bachelet Slides in Chile

September 07, 2007

(Angus Reid Global Monitor) - For the first time since she took office, the approval rating of Chilean president Michelle Bachelet has fallen below the 40 per cent mark, according to a poll by Adimark Gfk. 39.1 per cent of respondents have a positive opinion of the president’s performance, down 2.4 points since July.

Bachelet—a former defence minister—was elected in a January 2006 run-off as the candidate for the centre-left Agreement of Parties for Democracy (CPD) with 53.49 per cent of all cast ballots, defeating conservative Sebastián Piñera of National Renewal (RN). She officially took over as president in March 2006.

Since taking office, Bachelet has faced massive protests staged by high school students complaining about the poor quality of public education, and more recently street demonstrations in Santiago, the capital city, over the botched implementation of a new transportation program.

On Sept. 4, Bachelet signed a free trade agreement with Japan, saying, "I hope that Chile can serve as a gateway for Japan to the rest of Latin America. (...) The world’s political and economic centre has shifted from the trans-Atlantic to the Asia-Pacific region, and I expect our relationship with Asia will get closer over several decades."

Polling Data

Do you approve or disapprove of Michelle Bachelet’s performance as president?

 

Aug. 2007

Jul. 2007

Jun. 2007

Approve

39.1%

41.5%

43.2%

Disapprove

42.7%

42.8%

39.8%

Source: Adimark Gfk
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 1,013 Chilean adults, conducted from Aug. 7 to Aug. 26, 2007. Margin of error is 3 per cent.

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