One month after the election of President-elect Yoon Seok-yeol, SBS conducted a poll.



First, we asked what they thought about President-elect Yoon Seok-yeol and the activities of the Presidential Transition Committee.




With 45.4% doing well and 40.9% doing poorly, positive and negative responses met within the margin of error.




By age group, those in their 29s and younger and those in their 60s or older had a predominantly positive response, while those in their 40s and 50s had a predominantly negative response, and those in their 30s were tense.




By ideological orientation, the conservatives and progressives were mixed positively and negatively, respectively, while the middle class was tight.



Regarding the responsibilities of the clash between the old and the old powers over the relocation of the presidential office and the personnel of public institutions,




President-elect Moon 35.7% and President-elect Yoon 49.2% answered that the responsibility of President-elect Yoon was greater.




Contrary to the reserved position on the transition committee, a majority of responses pointed to 'responsibility of President-elect Yoon' even from the middle class.



At the end of the current government's tenure, the right to appoint the heads of public institutions




42.6% should respect the current government's personnel rights and 53.3% should follow the will of the elected party, with a majority saying they should empower the elected person.




Even in the middle class, the president-elect Yoon's side supported him.



Regarding the appointment of former Prime Minister Han Deok-soo as the first prime minister candidate for the new government by Yoon-elect,




Appropriate 50.8% and unsuitable 27.1% were almost twice as many positive answers.



I was asked which party candidate I would support in the national local election on June 1st.




The contention was within the margin of error with the Democratic Party 31.2% and the People's Power 33.7%.




The Justice Party accounted for 2.3%, and 3.4% answered that they support the People's Party, which is undergoing the process of unity with the power of the people.




By region, the Democratic Party prevailed in Gwangju, Jeollabuk-do, and in Daegu, Gyeongbuk, Busan, Ulsan, and Gyeongnam regions, but it was difficult to differentiate between the superiority and superiority in the metropolitan areas, such as Seoul, Incheon, and Gyeonggi, where the presidential elections were won.



We asked what kind of results would be desirable for this local election with the inauguration of the new government on May 10 and Batu.




The support for the ruling party candidate for the stability of the Yun Seok-yeol government was 46.6%, and the opposition candidate for checking the Yun Seok-yeol government was 44.6%, similar to the response of the preferred party candidate, it was tight within the margin of error.




Even in the middle class, stability and checks were similar.




The approval rating of President Moon Jae-in, who is about to leave office, for state management was 44.5% doing well and 48.9% not doing well.




Compared to the survey conducted in early February, before the election, the positive evaluation was slightly higher, and the negative evaluation fell below 50% for the first time since the survey started in July last year.


<Survey Overview>


Investigation Request: SBS


Research Agency: Next Research


Date and Time: April 6-7, 2022


Survey Subject: 12 men and women 18 years of age and older nationwide (with wired RDD and wireless Virtual number extraction)


Survey method: Wired/wireless telephone interview survey (wireless 86%, landline 14%)


Response rate: 15% (6,672 contacted, and 12 succeeded in the survey)


Weighting method: Weighted value by gender, age, and region Buyeo (cell weighted/based on the resident registration population of the Ministry of Public Administration and Security at the end of March 2022)


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


▶ Poll Statistics Table