Indian PM Narendra Modi most popular figure in Indian politics: Pew survey

Despite the overhaul of Delhi smog and last year’s demonetisation chaos, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi continues to outshine his popularity. PM Modi remains "by far" the most popular figure in Indian politics, an American think tank called the Pew Research Center said yesterday, releasing the main findings of its latest survey conducted among 2,464 respondents in India.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Photo courtesy: pmindia.gov.in

PM Modi at 88 per cent is 30 points ahead of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi (58 per cent), 31 points ahead of Congress president Sonia Gandhi (57 per cent) and 49 points ahead of Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal (39 per cent), said the survey conducted between February 21 and March 10 this year.

Pew said the public's "positive assessment" of PM Modi is buoyed by "growing contentment" with the Indian economy: more than eight-in-ten say economic conditions are "good", up 19 percentage points since immediately before the 2014 election.
 

pewresearch.org
Photo courtesy:pewresearch.org

The share of adults who say the economy is "very good" (30 per cent) has tripled in the past three years, it added. Overall, seven-in-ten Indians are now "satisfied" with the way things are going in the country. This positive assessment of India's direction has nearly doubled since 2014, Pew said.

"Since 2015, Modi's popularity is relatively unchanged in the north, has risen in the west and the south, and is down slightly in the east," it said.

.pewresearch.org
Photo courtesy: pewresearch.org

Notably, the survey reflects 21 percentage points drop in favourable view of America among Indians from 70 per cent in 2015 to just 49 per cent in 2017.

Only 40 per cent expressed confidence in US President Donald Trump to do the right thing regarding world affairs, down 34 points from their faith in his predecessor Barack Obama in 2015.

Same is the case with China, whose favorability rating among Indians have dropped from 41 per cent in 2015 to 26 per cent in 2017. The survey was conducted before the Doklam standoff.

According to Pew Survey, despite periodic outbreaks of religious violence, relatively few Indians see communal relations as a very big problem.

"Similarly, despite Prime Minister Modi's decision last November to abolish high-value banknotes, less than half of the Indian population sees the lack of availability of cash to be a major problem," it said.