SBS conducted a poll on major issues.



First, we asked if Song Young-gil, the president of the Democratic Party, who was elected on May 2nd, thought he was doing well, 42.4% said he was doing well and 39.7% said he was doing it wrong.



By age group, there were relatively more negative evaluations in those in their 30s and younger, and more positive evaluations in those in their 50s and older.



The progressives gained the majority of support, and the middle classes were strongly opposed to positives and negatives.




On the 11th of last month, when the same question was asked about Lee Jun-seok, the representative of People's Power, who became the leader of the first opposition party in his 30s, 64.8% were doing well and 20.8% were doing it wrong.



By age group, over 70% of people in their 50s or older said they were doing well, but those in their 20s and 30s who were below this representative age group recorded around 50%.



By gender, the male support rate was high at 71.9% versus 57.9%.




Regarding the so-called '86 withdrawal theory' that the so-called '86 generation' politicians who were born in the 60's and 80's should step down from the center of politics, 51.8% were in favor of a generational change, and 41.3% were against a specific generational change, with more than half in favor. I did.




The party approval ratings were 32.9% for the Democratic Party, 33.6% for People's Strength, 4.1% for the Justice Party, 4.7% for the People's Party, and 3.4% for the Open Democratic Party.



Compared to the February survey, the Democratic Party dropped 5.6 percentage points, and the people's power rose 12.8 percentage points.




Regarding President Moon Jae-in's state affairs, 41.3% were doing well and 53.9% were doing it wrong.




When asked about the issue of installing CCTV in the operating room, which went to the National Assembly in July, 'installation in the operating room' was overwhelming at 71.2% to prevent medical accidents and crimes.



This is four times higher than the 17.9% 'installation of an entrance outside the operating room', a compromise proposed by the government.



Due to the contraction of medical staff and the risk of personal information leakage, only 7.8% of the respondents said they were against the installation.




Regarding the question of the choice of the COVID-19 vaccine, 54.1% said that the option should be guaranteed to relieve anxiety, and 43.9% said it should be limited because there is a concern about a disruption in the inoculation speed, which is rather high.



Among those in their 30s and younger who have not been vaccinated in earnest, the response to 'guarantee choice' was particularly high at 60%.




Regarding the social distancing easing policy applied from yesterday (1st), 46% were premature, and 50.9% took appropriate measures.



By age group, young people aged 18 to 29 years old and older people over 60 years old answered that it was appropriate, while those in their 30s and 50s answered that it was premature.




Regarding the disaster aid that has been paid since last year to overcome the corona damage, the personal help and social effect were not large, but the highest at 36.2%.



It was followed by personal help and a great social effect, with 23.6%.




<Survey Overview>


Investigation Request: SBS


Investigation Agency: Ipsos


Survey Date: June 28-29, 2021


Investigation Target: 14 men and women over 18 years of age nationwide (wired RDD and wireless Virtual number extraction)


Survey method: Wired/wireless telephone interview survey (wireless 90%, landline 10%)


Response rate: 12.3%


Weighting method: Weighted by gender, age, and region (cell weighted/based on the resident registration population of the Ministry of Public Administration and Security at the end of May 2021)


Sample error: ±3.1% points (95% confidence level)



For more information, see the National Election Opinion Survey Deliberation Committee or SBS News website.



▶ Go to SBS Opinion Poll Statistical Table