Apple and Google are more popular than any presidential candidate

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Corporations aren't people, but if Apple were to run against Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, it would have a good shot at beating either, according to a new WSJ/NBC poll released on Wednesday.

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As it turns out, 54% of registered voters polled have positive feelings torward Apple, while 14% have a negative opinion.

That's a better favorability rating than every single presidential candidate, and a lower unfavorability rating than any too, except for Republican candidate John Kasich.

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Trump, for example, scored a 64% unfavorability rating in the same poll.

In fact, there was only one organization with better favorability numbers than Apple: its Silicon Valley neighbor Google. 67% of the 1200 people polled had a positive or somewhat positive opinion of the search giant.

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Poll numbers

NBC/WSJ

The pollster only recently added both Google and Apple to its question about general feelings towards public figures, groups, so its hard to tell how Apple's recent legal battle with the FBI has affected its public perception.

The poll also asked questions specifically about that high profile issue, and found that 42% of those polled said that Apple should cooperate with the FBI to unlock an iPhone used by a shooter in the San Bernardino attack, while 47% said that Apple shouldn't.

Public perception may become critical as Apple looks to influence potential legislation which might force it to weaken its own security in order to help out law enforcement. On Wednesday, Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein and Attorney General Loretta Lynch discussed the possibility of legislation requiring Apple to create a "back door" in its operating system.

During a congressional hearing earlier this month, Apple general counsel Bruce Sewell was challenged to propose an encyrption law that Apple would support.

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Google could use its popularity to affect new laws as well, especially as its self-driving car hits the road and it needs to figure out liability and regulations in the certain event some of them will crash.

At least Apple and Google know that if politics were a simple popularity contest, they would probably win.

You can take a look at the complete poll results here.

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