According to the research, only 5.3% of Salvadorans oppose Nayib Bukele’s political system.
Nearly 93% of Salvadorans, according to a recent TResearch study, think President Nayib Bukele is doing a good job leading his country. For the political figure who assumed his position in 2019, this has been the highest degree of backing.
Due mostly to his support for Bitcoin, Bukele is a well-known personality in the cryptocurrency community. El Salvador, the first nation to accept the main digital asset as legal cash, did so during his leadership.
Salvadorans Appreciate Bukele
Only 5.3% of respondents to the survey voiced dissatisfaction with the administration of Bukele, while 92.3% supported its policies and activities. Handling the COVID-19 epidemic, constructing new roads and improving the transportation system, and putting changes into place in the education industry are among of the finest accomplishments of the President’s cabinet.
But in the eyes of the general public, Bukele is renowned for having destroyed neighborhood gangs and introduced Bitcoin to the country.
The first nation to proclaim Bitcoin to be legal money within its boundaries was El Salvador in 2021. The administration of Bukele did not stop there; in the years that followed, it unveiled other projects exploiting the resource.
It made large BTC purchases and invested the proceeds in a sizable veterinary facility. Additionally, it disclosed plans for the construction of a future “Bitcoin City” in the nation’s southeast.
It should come as no surprise that the future city would use Bitcoin as its official currency, and that its metropolitan area will be built in a fashion that, when viewed from above, might resemble the digital asset’s emblem.
Bukele recently outlined how adopting Bitcoin has improved tourism in El Salvador by over 100%, repaired its heritage, and made the nation very well-liked among investors and businesspeople.
The leader serving a second term?
Bukele declared he will run in the elections in 2024 despite the fact that El Salvador’s constitution forbids presidents from serving two terms in a row.
“I’m announcing to the Salvadoran people that I’ve decided to run as a candidate for President of the Republic,” the 41-year-old announced in September.
Nevertheless, it appears that the controversial choice won’t be met with any opposition from the community because 93% of them want him to continue leading them after the election next year. 6.8% of people say they would prefer another president.