Yes, to quote Robin Williams, we're glad the 'comedy pinata' has moved on. Obama's autobiography The Audacity of Hope was well-recieved here and he was seen as a promising candidate but even we rolled our eyes a little when the Nobel Prize came around. To be honest, I think we're glad he's not as irksome (or downright scary) as some of the Republicans - coming from a rather moderate, welfare-state country (but God knows how long that's going to last!) your two-party 'bastion' of a system is rather beyond us, I'm afraid.The_root_of_all_evil said:He's not Bush. That gets a LOT of praise.VonBrewskie said:I'd like to know how some of you British folks feel about President Obama.
However, referring to BP as "BRITISH Petroleum" all the time is rather jingoistic given that BP hasn't been British for a long time.
I should also point out that our own domestic politics have been more exciting than usual over the past year with us currently under a coalition government so the US situation maybe hasn't had the same extent of coverage as it otherwise would have. This extends more recently to events such as us patting ourselves on the back about how we quickly we reacted to Libya while merely approving of Obama's change in approach to involvement in the Arab Spring since 'dithering' in Egypt.