Hillary Rodham Clinton, by comparison, is viewed somewhat less favorably by the key voting groups whose record-setting turnout in 2008 propelled Obama to the White House and will be crucial to her own success.
Roughly two-thirds of Hispanics view Obama favorably, compared to just over half of Hispanics who say the same about Clinton. Among self-identified liberals, Obama's favorability stands at 87 per cent, to Clinton's 72 per cent.
The findings offer a window into the factors at play as Clinton decides how closely to embrace Obama, his record and his policies in her campaign for president.
Although associating herself with Obama could turn off some independent and Republican-leaning voters, electoral math and changing demographics make it critical for Democrats to turn out high numbers of Hispanics, African Americans and young voters.
Overall, Obama's job approval rating stands at 43 percent, a leveling off following an AP-GfK poll conducted in early February that put his approval at 47 per cent slightly higher than it had been through most of 2014.
When AP-GfK polled in October 2014, Obama's approval rating among Hispanics had plummeted to 39 per cent, as Hispanic advocacy groups demanded that Obama take aggressive action on immigration. One month later, he did just that and his job approval among Hispanics now stands at 56 per cent.
Whereas 72 per cent of liberals approved of Obama's performance in October, that number now appears to have climbed, to 82 per cent.
The survey reinforces a concern expressed by many Democrats about Clinton's candidacy: that she just doesn't inspire the levels of enthusiasm among traditional Democratic constituencies that were so critical to Obama's success.
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