President Uhuru Kenyatta was ranked
third among the best-performing sub-Saharan African leaders in a survey
of presidential job approval ratings conducted by an international
pollster.
President Kenyatta received a 78 per cent job
approval rating, behind Mali’s President Ibrahim Keita, 86 per cent,
and Botswana’s Ian Khama, 81 per cent, in the survey by Gallup.
Most African leaders attending the US-Africa summit this week received more than 50 per cent in their job approval ratings.
President Kenyatta was followed by Cameroon’s long-time president, Paul Biya, at 70 per cent.
“Among
leaders who received some of the highest approval ratings in 2013, a
few have been in office for more than two decades such as Cameroon's
Paul Biya and Uganda's Yoweri Museveni,” stated Gallup.
President Kenyatta was ranked highly among respondents who were 45 years and above.
GENERATION GAP
Respondents
aged between 35 and 44 years were less inclined to approve of his
leadership, posting the lowest percentage of approval, 70 per cent.
The generational gap portrayed in the survey displayed a sharp contrast between Kenya and Nigeria.
“Younger
Nigerians are the most likely to approve of the job performance of
their president compared with all other age groups. In Kenya, those aged
45 and older are the most likely to approve of the job their president
is doing.”
President Uhuru had been in office for less
than a year when the poll was conducted in December 2013, while Mali’s
Keta had just been elected four months before the survey.
President
Joseph Kabila of the Democratic Republic of Congo had the lowest
ratings at 24 per cent, with most of his approval coming from those aged
35 to 44 years.
Malawi’s Joyce Banda, who is no longer
in office, had a job approval rating of 51 per cent during her one term
as the country’s president.
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