Though she fell short of cinching the presidency in a historic election this year, Hillary Clinton has managed to win another title. The former candidate has been named the "most admired" woman of 2016 in Gallup's annual survey. Each year since 1946, Gallup has asked Americans to name the man and woman they most admire, from anywhere in the world. This year's results are based on a poll of 1,028 people conducted from December 7 to 11. Perhaps even more notable? She's actually earned this accolade a record total of 21 times.

Clinton is officially our most beloved woman for the fifteenth consecutive year with 12 percent of votes—which is not to be confused with the 48.2 percent of the popular vote she earned in the presidental election. (President-elect Donald J. Trump came in second on that count, with 46.1 percent.) But we digress. Clinton first snagged the Gallup honor in 1993 when she became First Lady, and in the past 23 years, she's only been bested by two women: Mother Theresa in 1995 and 1996, and Laura Bush in 2001. This year, First Lady Michelle Obama took the number two spot, followed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, and Queen Elizabeth. Former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who passed away in 1962, has the second-longest winning streak, having been named "most admired" 13 times.

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Among the men, President Barack Obama is most admired for the ninth consecutive year with 22 percent of the vote, defeating runner-up President-elect Trump, who received 15 percent of the votes. Gallup attributes Obama's victory over Trump to "earning more mentions among Democrats than Trump receives from Republicans." Fifty percent of Democrats surveyed chose Obama, while 34 percent of Republicans chose Trump. According to Gallup, of the 70 times the survey has been conducted, the incumbent president has won the honor 58 times, which means that while it's very likely that the president will win, he's not a total shoo-in.

Of the top ten most admired men, which include Pope Francis, Bernie Sanders, Bill Gates, and Bill Clinton, the only newcomer is Vice President-elect Mike Pence, in the number ten spot with one percent of the vote. Pence shouldn't feel too sour about his polling. Theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking pulled similar numbers.

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