Originally published Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 12:00 AM
President Bush, Sen. Clinton named "most admired" man, woman
They're the odd couple again: George Bush and Hillary Clinton, the most-admired man and woman in America. Though on opposite sides of a...
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — They're the odd couple again: George Bush and Hillary Clinton, the most-admired man and woman in America.
Though on opposite sides of a political divide, the Republican president and the Democratic senator from New York are sharing the honor for a sixth straight year, according to a USA Today-Gallup Poll.
They didn't win by much. Oprah Winfrey and Clinton's husband, Bill, were right behind.
When people were asked to name the man they most admire, 10 percent picked Bush, his lowest figure in the seven years he has been president. Former President Clinton got 8 percent — within the poll's margin of sampling error — while Nobel Prize winner and former Vice President Al Gore had 6 percent and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, a presidential hopeful, 5 percent.
Whoever is president has won the most-admired title every year since 1981.
Sen. Clinton, hoping to be president-elect by the time of the next poll, was named by 18 percent as the most-admired woman, the 12th time she has been in the top spot. Talk-show host Winfrey was close second with 16 percent. First lady Laura Bush and actress Angelina Jolie were each selected by 3 percent.
The poll, released Wednesday, asked participants an open-ended question, allowing them to respond with any names. The rest of the votes were spread among a variety of government figures, movie stars, friends and relatives. Queen Elizabeth II was in the top 10 for a record 41st time.
The poll of 1,011 adults had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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