Barack Obama likely to be an 'average' President: Survey

US President Barack Obama is likely to be viewed as an average president if he serves only one term, according to a statistical analysis of presidential ranking surveys.

This would dash the President's self-professed hope of being viewed as 'a really good one-term president' if he loses in November 2012, according to conclusions based upon research by Curt Nichols, an assistant professor of political science at Baylor University.

Nichols will present his research paper on September 4 at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in Seattle.

On the flip side, if Obama is re-elected and seen as the transformational president he seeks to be, he is likely to be viewed as a 'Near Great' president and land at the fourth overall spot on the ranking list -- one place below George Washington and one above Thomas Jefferson, Nichols said.

Nichols' research, using a statistical method known as regression analysis, evaluates presidential ranking polls conducted by The Wall Street Journal, C-SPAN and the Siena Research Institute.

He found that eight factors are consistently used by experts to give presidents their rating scores.

The rating scores of presidents increase: with the number of years they serve, when they are recognised as wartime leaders, when they successfully transform the political landscape, when they are a member of the founding fathers, when they are considered a progressive in 'pursuit of equal justice for all', when they are assassinated progressives, such as Abraham Lincoln or John F Kennedy.

The rating scores of presidents decrease: when the president is impeached, resigns or has an administration noted for major scandal, when they either push the nation into political crisis or fail to lift the country out of one.

"Even as one-term president, Obama would be expected to receive credits for serving four years and being both a wartime president and a progressive," Nichols said.

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