Bernama Online | KUALA LUMPUR, 09-June-2010 — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak’s approval rating soared to 72 per cent, up from 69 per cent in April, according to a study conducted by an opinion research firm, Merdeka Centre.
The poll conducted from May 6 to 16 showed the highest approval rating among Indians (80 per cent) followed by Malays (77 per cent) and Chinese (58 per cent).
This is a marked increase since Merdeka Centre started a survey on Najib’s popularity in March when he took over the reins of the administration. The approval rating then was merely 44 per cent.
According to Merdeka Centre, a sample size of 1,028 Malaysians were quizzed over the telephone for the survey and 47 per cent of them were unemployed.
Among issues which surfaced at the time of the survey were the fatal shooting of the 15-year-old Aminulrasyid Amzah, the ban on May 13 gathering initiated by Gertak and an announcement on a proposal to legalise sports betting.
The issues may have also influenced the Sibu parliamentary by-election result where Barisan Nasional lost by a slim majority.
The study also showed that 50 per cent of the respondents believed that Najib would be able to achieve his targets within two years on his initiatives, namely the 1Malaysia concept, the Government Transformation Plan (GTP) and the New Economic Model (NEM).
Once again, the Indians made up the highest number of respondents stating their confidence in Najib (65 per cent), followed by Malays (60 per cent) while Chinese made up only 30 per cent.
Questioned whether they thought the programmes introduced by Najib would encounter the problem of “good in planning, but weak in implementation”, 58 per cent of the respondents felt this would be the case.
The study also found that 52 per cent of respondents agreed that the country was now heading in the right direction with 21 per cent giving the reason that the economy was recovering and quality of life of the people was improving.
However, 22 per cent of the respondents felt that the government should solve economic issues such as rising cost of living and prices of goods, unemployment and sugar shortages.
The survey also showed that the majority of Malaysians were still not satisfied with the government’s efforts to combat crime and corruption, with 67 per cent and 57 per cent of respondents citing dissatisfaction in the two areas respectively.
However, 63 per cent of the respondents were satisfied with the quality of education in the country while 56 per cent were happy with the government’s efforts to improve public transportation in urban areas like Kuala Lumpur.
Also asked in the survey was what they thought about the case of Aminulrasyid Amzah, 15, who was killed when police fired at a car they were pursuing in Shah Alam on April 26.
Ninety-one per cent of the respondents said they were dismayed by his death.
As to the police’s response in the incident, only 25 per cent said they were satisfied as to how police handled it.
— BERNAMA

The Malaysian Insider | KUALA LUMPUR, 09-June-2010 — Nearly 60 per cent of respondents in a new poll by Merdeka Center were dissatisfied with the police handling of the April shooting of a 14-year-old-boy in Shah Alam.
The Malaysian Insider | KUALA LUMPUR, 08-June-2010 — Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s approval ratings rose slightly in the latest Merdeka Center survey released today, rising from 69 per cent in April to 72 per cent in May bolstered by a sense that the nation was headed in the right direction.
Malaysiakini.com | 27-Apr-2011 – While BN had a head start through government campaigns, Sarawak PKR was dealing with factionalism which may have cost them several seats in the recently-concluded state polls.
“The two factions, one led by (Sarawak PKR chief) Baru Bian and the other by Malay-Melanau leaders, led to a lot of local power-broking among those vying for candidacy,” Aeria (right) told an audience of about 300 at a forum organised by pollster Merdeka Centre in Selangor yesterday.
PKR’s success in the Ba’Kelalan, Krian and Batu Lintang constituencies, said Aeria, was more due to groundwork than anything else.
“There was little grassroots-level cooperation where it was more a case of you want that seat, now you’re on your own, even thoughthe leadership shared platforms,” he said.
Agreeing with him, Monash University media and political science lecturer Wong Chin Huat (left) said the new opposition assemblypersons need also to work harder to maintain support in urban areas.
Some 74 per cent of Malays polled were satisfied with Najib’s performance, while 77 per cent of Indians fell into the same category, indicating perhaps that the minority community has been won over by the PM’s symbolic gestures, including visiting Batu Caves during Thaipusam and his pledge to uplift the economic status of Indians.