In celebration of the Lunar New Year holidays, SBS conducted public opinion polls on various issues.
First of all, regarding the by-election of the Mayor of Seoul in April, I asked who he thought was the best candidate for the mayor of Seoul among the candidates for the mayor of Seoul. It was in order.
In the pan-optics, Ahn Cheol-soo, former Congressman Na Gyeong-won, 15.5%, former mayor Oh Se-hun, 11.8%, and former lawmaker Tae-seop Geum 4.3%.
Among the bilateral confrontations between pan-passport and pan-opposition candidates on the premise of unification, Park Young-seon and Ahn Cheol-soo, each of the top candidates, were within the margin of error at 40.6% vs. 43.5%.
By age group, people in their 40s preferred Park Young-sun, and those under 29 and over 60 preferred Ahn Chul-soo.
In the case of unification of opposition powers as candidates for the people’s strength, Park took the lead with Park Young-sun vs. Na Gyeong-won 43.7% vs. 33.7%, Park Young-sun vs. Oh Se-Hoon 45.1% vs. 33% in the opposition rivalry.
Assuming that the single candidate for pan-passport was Sang-ho Woo of the Democratic Party, it was difficult to determine the superiority and inferiority to candidates Na Gyeong-won and Oh Se-hoon.
On the other hand, in the virtual confrontation between Woo Sang-ho vs. Ahn Chul-soo, Ahn’s superiority stood out at 33% vs. 46.9%.
The criteria for selecting candidates for the mayor of Seoul were 28.5 for real estate measures, 25.9 for candidate morality, and 19.4% for local economy activation.
Those in their 30s and younger responded that they think real estate measures are the most important, and those over 60 say that candidate morality is the most important.
This survey was commissioned by SBS to Ipsos, a polling agency, and from the 6th to the 9th, 800 voters in Seoul were responded through a wired/wireless telephone interview, and the sample error was a 95% confidence level and a plus or minus 3.5% point.