[lbo-talk] third-world (and the rest) on bush

ravi gadfly at exitleft.org
Wed Sep 8 19:41:05 PDT 2004


w.r.t recent thread regarding tariq ali and 3rd world opinion of bush, this (if not already posted) might be of relevance:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=586&e=3&u=/nm/20040908/wl_nm/campaign_world_opinion_dc

in particular, in india, the poll says, the opinion on bush was divided.

--ravi

World Wants Bush Out of the White House: Poll

Wed Sep 8, 7:04 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The world wants President Bush (news - web sites) out of the White House, according to a poll released on Wednesday that shows in 30 of 35 countries people preferred Democrat candidate John Kerry (news - web sites).

Photo Reuters Photo

Kerry was particularly favored in traditionally strong U.S. allies and beat Bush on average by more than a two-to-one margin, 46 percent to 20 percent, the survey by GlobeScan Inc, a global research firm, and the University of Maryland, said.

The survey of attitudes around the world contrasts with U.S. polls that have shown the American electorate closely divided and that Bush has been gaining momentum since the Republican convention this month.

Bush launched a U.S.-led invasion of Iraq (news - web sites) last year over the objections of many governments, including allies, and the first U.S. pre-emptive war angered many people around the world. Kerry has said he will pursue stronger international alliances if he wins the presidency.

"Only one in five want to see Bush re-elected. Though he is not as well known, Kerry would win handily if the people of the world were to elect the U.S. president," Steven Kull, director of the university's program on international policy attitudes, said.

The only countries where Bush was preferred in the poll of 34,330 people that was conducted mainly in July and August were the Philippines, Nigeria and Poland. India and Thailand were divided.

Asked how the foreign policy of Bush has affected their feelings toward the United States, a majority or plurality of respondents in 30 countries said it made them feel worse about America, while in three countries more respondents said they felt better.

The survey's margin of error was plus or minus 2.3 to 5 percentage points.



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