
One of a flood of new international polls on which U.S. candidate people prefer, is one by Latinobarometro. According to the Chilean organization’s Web site, this annual survey involves some 19,000 interviews in 18 Latin American countries, representing more than 400 million inhabitants.
Covering the results of the survey, this article from Uruguay’s Observa newspaper says in part:
“Asked about which candidate would be more advantageous for Latin America, 29 percent prefer Democrat Barack Obama and only 8 percent Republican John McCain. Another 29 percent think it doesn’t matter, 31 percent don’t know and 2 percent didn’t respond. … As for the attention that the new U.S. president will pay to Latin America, the answers vary a lot, with 39 percent of Dominicans who think he will pay more attention, an opinion shared by 31 percent in Brazil and 29 percent in Costa Rica and Uruguay.
“At the other extreme are Honduras, Bolivia and El Salvador, with only 14 percent who share that view, while in Guatemala and Panama, those who think he will pay more attention are at 15 percent, in Peru at 16 percent, in Chile and Ecuador at 19 percent, at 21 percent in Nicaragua, 24 percent in Argentina and Paraguay, 25 percent in Colombia and 27 percent in Venezuela and Mexico.”
Translated By Halszka Czarnocka
October 27, 2008
Uruguay – Observa – Original Article (Spanish)
Forty one percent of Uruguayans prefer the Democratic candidate to win the presidential election, while only 6 percent believe it would be better for his Republican rival John McCain to win.
The majority of Latin Americans, 57 percent, know little or nothing about the U.S. presidential election, but a modest plurality of 29 percent think that Democrat Barack Obama would be better for the region.
These are the results of the Latinobarómetro 2008 survey [], which included three questions about the U.S. election, and which were released today by the Santiago de Chile-based institution. The complete results of Latinobarómetro will be published by mid-November, said Marta Lagos, the director of the organization.
READ ON AT WORLDMEETS.US, along with continuing translated and English-language foreign press coverage of the U.S. election
















