A new survey being released today by CFR and the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press shows that members of the Washington elite view the U.S. president's stewardship of American foreign policy in a much more favorable light than the average observer on the street. On issues ranging from terrorism to climate change, Iran, Iraq, China, Guantánamo, even immigration, CFR members surveyed overwhelmingly approved of the president's actions so far. Joe Sixpack? Not so much. "Members of the Council on Foreign Relations offer far more positive assessments of Obama's foreign policy in almost all areas."
Entitled "America's Place in the World," the survey polled more than 600 members of CFR and 2,000 members of the general public, comparing expert and amateur perceptions of not only Obama's performance one year in, but also their views on many of the top foreign-policy issues of the day.
The disparity was actually quite large. For example, 83 percent and 81 percent of CFR members approved of Obama's handling of Iraq and Guantánamo, respectively, whereas the general public gave approval ratings of 41 and 39 percent on those issues.
Obama's work on Iran, climate change, terrorism, and China were all rated in the 70s by the experts, dozens of points higher than when rated by people without a full-time job in foreign affairs. Only 33 percent of the ordinary Americans surveyed praised Obama's work related to the rise of China.