-
When Lula left office, he had a popularity rating of around 85%, according to polling firm Sensus in Minas Gerais state.
FORBES: How the Dreyfus Brazil Mutual Fund Beats the Brazil ETFs
-
An office holder with a job approval rating consistently in the mid 40% range might be scrambling to present a new face to voters.
FORBES: Obama's Low Poll Numbers No Solace for Detractors
-
When she left office three years later she had an approval rating of 84%.
ECONOMIST: The discontents of a healthy democracy
-
Most analysts think investors should stand pat on Office Depot, with 10 of 13 analysts rating it hold.
FORBES: Earnings Preview: Office Depot
-
The majority of analysts think investors should stand pat on Office Depot, with 10 of 13 analysts rating it hold.
FORBES: Earnings Preview: Office Depot
-
Since Ortega took office, the economy has slowed, and his approval rating has dropped.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Tehran threat in the US' backyard
-
Though "The Office" is unlikely to beat last fall's premiere rating, it could easily post a considerable improvement over the back half of last season, when the show dropped off to series-low numbers.
CNN: Can NBC's fall winning streak continue?
-
"The Office" had 4.3 million viewers and a 2.1 rating among adults 18-49, down a whopping 46 percent in the demo from last fall.
CNN: 'The Office,' 'Parks and Rec' return to lower ratings
-
Still, Mr Archer managed to balance the budget and boost the city's credit rating while filling 1.1m potholes. (His office keeps track of that, too.) He put more police officers on the street.
ECONOMIST: Detroit
-
And Reagan's personal approval rating was sufficiently intact that he was able to hand over the office to his vice president.
CNN: Obama's second-term curse? Not so fast
-
Ronald Reagan's approval rating stayed over 50 percent until November of his first year in office, but once it slipped below that mark, it stayed under 50 percent for two years.
CNN: Most give Obama thumbs up on first 100 days, polls say
-
In Virginia, his favorable rating is twenty-seven per cent, a fact that makes a statewide run for office in the near future a dim prospect.
NEWYORKER: The House of Pain