Obama keeps most admired status in annual Gallup poll, Trump 2nd

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TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump and former president Barack Obama stand on the steps of the US Capitol with First Lady Melania Trump and Michelle Obama on January 20, 2017 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the Unit Copyright Rob Carr AFP - Getty Images
By Phil Helsel with NBC News
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More Americans are likely to name former President Barack Obama as the man they admire most, although the gap between him and President Trump has narrowed.

More Americans are likely to name former President Barack Obama as the man they admire most, although the gap between the former president and the current has narrowed over the last year, a poll has found.

Seventeen percent of those polled said Obama was the man they admired most, compared to 14 percent who picked President Donald Trump, a Gallup poll released Wednesday said.

In 2016, 22 percent of those surveyed picked Obama and 15 percent picked Trump, according to Gallup.

Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton continued to top the most admired woman question, according to the poll, with 9 percent of those surveyed picking her in 2017. That number fell from 15 percent in 2013 and 12 percent in 2016, according to Gallup.

Image: TOPSHOT-US-POLITICS-TRUMP-INAUGURATION-SWEARING IN
TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump and former president Barack Obama stand on the steps of the US Capitol with First Lady Melania Trump and Michelle Obama on January 20, 2017 in Washington, DC. Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States Friday -- ushering in a new political era that has been cheered and feared in equal measure. / AFP PHOTO / POOL / Rob CarrROB CARR/AFP/Getty Images Rob CarrAFP - Getty Images

Former first lady Michelle Obama came in second in 2017 with 7 percent of those surveyed choosing her as the woman they admire most, Gallup said. The survey was conducted by telephone interviews done from Dec. 4 to Dec. 11, using a random sample of 1,049 adults.

This year's survey marked one of the relatively few times that the incumbent president was not picked as the most admired man, according to Gallup. The question has been asked since 1946 — the only year it wasn't asked was in 1976 — and of those 71 times the incumbent president was chosen 58 times, according to Gallup.

Republicans were much more likely to name Trump than Obama, with 35 percent picking him and 1 percent picking Obama. Democrats picked Obama over Trump 39 percent to 3 percent, according to Gallup.

Among those also picked as the man those surveyed admired most were Pope Francis, at 3 percent; the Rev. Billy Graham at 2 percent; and Republican Sen. John McCain and SpaceX and Telsa Motors CEO Elon Musk, also at 2 percent each, according to Gallup.

Also in the top of women admired most in the survey were Oprah Winfrey at 4 percent, Sen. Elizabeth Warren at 3 percent and German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Queen Elizabeth II at 2 percent each, Gallup said. First lady Melania Trump was also in the top 10 with 1 percent.

But a quarter of Americans surveyed said they could not name a man or woman they admired most, and 9 percent of people picked a friend or relative as the man they admire most, and 13 percent picked a friend or relative as the woman they admire most, according to Gallup.

Trump has an approval rating of around 38 percent as of Tuesday, according to Gallup's daily tracking poll.

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll in October found that 38 percent of Americans approved of Trump's job performance, while 58 percent disapproved. That number was the lowest job approval rate of his presidency, NBC reported at the time.

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