What? Michelle Obama isn't America's favorite first lady?
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| Washington
Someone may want to tell Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as she globe-trots on behalf of President Obama鈥檚 foreign policy that Americans pick her as one of their favorite first ladies.
Secretary Clinton ties with Nancy Reagan in a new national poll by Angus Reid Public Opinion in New York that asks Americans to name their favorite first lady since 1974. Clinton and Mrs. Reagan finish tied for first place at 19 percent each, with current first lady Michelle Obama coming in second at 15 percent. Laura Bush follows with 12 percent.
鈥淭he irony of this is that Hillary and Nancy were the two first ladies of modern times to be a political liability for their husbands,鈥 says Robert Watson, a scholar of US first ladies at Lynn University in Boca Raton, Fla. 鈥淭hey are the only two first ladies who were not more popular than their husbands when they were in office.鈥
But first ladies Reagan and Clinton have both risen recently in the public鈥檚 estimation, he adds, first as their respective husbands have gained in public stature, but then in their own right.
She ought to be an advocate
The online survey of 1,016 Americans, conducted in early May, did not ask respondents to explain their choices. But an accompanying finding of the poll 鈥搕hat Americans want first ladies who are strong advocates for certain causes during their time in the White House 鈥 may help explain the poll鈥檚 results.
Nancy Reagan is remembered for the admonition to American kids to 鈥淛ust say no鈥 to drugs, while Clinton is associated with international women鈥檚 and girls鈥 issues (that is, once Americans get past the Clinton presidency鈥檚 health-care debacle).
The other first ladies since 1974 鈥 Betty Ford, Rosalynn Carter, and Barbara Bush 鈥 all came in under 10 percent.
Despite taking the red second-place ribbon, Mrs. Obama clocks a favorable 60 percent approval rating among Americans over all.
Often in such ratings the current 鈥渙ffice holder鈥 takes top prize, aided by current events and name recognition. 鈥淚n any poll of the 鈥榖est鈥 and 鈥榳orst鈥 presidents, for example, the recent ones always come in at the top of the list,鈥 Professor Watson says.
Male voters shy away from Michelle
But the poll suggests that Obama may have been denied the blue first-place ribbon by American men, who give her considerably lower marks than women. While women overall give Obama the top prize at 20 percent, nearly a quarter (24 percent) of American men choose Nancy Reagan as their favorite first lady.
Obama, whose husband faced a deficit among male voters in the 2008 election, lags behind Reagan, Clinton, and Laura Bush with only 8 percent of the male vote.
鈥淧art of the problem for Michelle Obama is that the folks who don鈥檛 like her husband really don鈥檛 like her husband, and so they are not about to like her, either,鈥 he says. But Obama鈥檚 overall high marks reflect wide approval of how she has made herself 鈥淢om in chief,鈥 as Watson says.
鈥淢ichele Obama has found the balance that all first ladies struggle to find,鈥 he says, noting that she makes clear she is a mother and her husband鈥檚 helpmeet first, even as she takes on popular issues like nutrition, child obesity, and improving services for military families.
Watson says that in the most recent poll he conducted among presidential scholars of first ladies, nearly a decade ago, Clinton did OK 鈥 coming in at number 10 鈥 while Reagan was near the bottom (Mary Todd Lincoln came in dead last).
But both first ladies have risen in the public鈥檚 esteem since then, he says. Reagan 鈥 aka 鈥淒ragon Lady鈥 during her White House years, Watson recalls 鈥 has a considerably different image now, fashioned by the way she stood by her ailing husband and protected him. 鈥淧eople now really see it as a love story,鈥 Watson says.
And Clinton? Americans, who still associate first ladies with their husband鈥檚 presidencies, 鈥渁re thinking the balanced budgets and years of relative peace during Bill Clinton look pretty good,鈥 Watson says. 鈥淎nd then to many of them,鈥 he adds, 鈥淗illary has turned out to be a pretty solid secretary of State.鈥
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