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Ankara: Turks Pick Obama Over McCain For US President

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  • Ankara: Turks Pick Obama Over McCain For US President

    TURKS PICK OBAMA OVER MCCAIN FOR US PRESIDENT

    Today's Zaman
    23 October 2008, Thursday
    Turkey

    Turks are widely indifferent toward the outcome of the upcoming
    presidential election in the US, but those who care overwhelmingly
    favor Democratic candidate Barack Obama over Republican John McCain,
    an international survey has revealed.

    Twenty-two percent of the Turks polled said they wanted to see Obama
    elected as US president in next month's election, while only 8 percent
    supported McCain, according to a Gallup poll of 70 countries conducted
    between May and September. Seventy percent of the Turks surveyed did
    not state an opinion.

    The results closely parallel findings across the globe. The poll,
    published on Tuesday, revealed that around the world respondents
    favored Obama four to one over McCain. Among the nations polled,
    representing nearly half of the world's population, 30 percent
    of respondents say they would personally rather see Obama elected
    president of the United States, compared with just 8 percent who say
    the same about McCain. At the same time, 62 percent of world citizens
    surveyed did not have an opinion.

    People outside of the US seem more divided over whether the outcome of
    the US election makes a difference to their country, with 31 percent
    saying it does and 21 percent saying it does not. Nearly half of
    those surveyed did not have an opinion. In Turkey, 32 percent said
    the election outcome would make a difference, while 33 percent said
    it would not. Thirty-four percent did not state an opinion.

    Senator Obama is popular amongst Turks, but some are concerned
    that relations with the United States could suffer a blow under his
    presidency given his firm pledges of support for Armenian claims of
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, charges categorically
    denied by Ankara. Obama also caused concern when it emerged that he
    referred to Turkey as an "invader" in a letter to a Greek-American
    group. McCain, on the other hand, is perceived as a follower of the
    policies of the unpopular George W. Bush, and his hawkish stance on
    Iran's nuclear program raises fears of a clash between Washington
    and Ankara over sanctions on Tehran.

    Overall, people in Europe are the most likely to state a preference
    for the next president of the United States and to think the election
    makes a difference to their country. Sixty-four percent of French
    respondents favored Obama, while only 4 percent expressed support for
    McCain. In Britain, 60 percent favored Obama as opposed to 15 percent
    for McCain. More than 70 percent of respondents in the Netherlands
    and Norway picked the Democratic candidate.

    In Asia, respondents turned out to be the least likely to state a
    preference for the next president of the United States or to think
    the election makes a difference to their country. In individual
    countries, only Georgia, which fought a brief war against Russia over
    the breakaway region of South Ossetia in August, Cambodia, Laos and
    the Philip-pines prefer McCain to Obama.

    In Canada, 67 percent chose Obama and 22 percent picked McCain. Also,
    75 percent of Canadian respondents said the presidential election
    would make a difference to their own country. The Democratic nominee
    also enjoyed levels of support higher than 60 percent in Australia,
    Ger-many, England and Japan, where the US election was viewed as
    having a global impact.
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