Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy

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Mary

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Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy December 20,
2006 By Gregory Wilpert

Venezuelans view their democracy more favorably than the citizens of
all other Latin American countries view their own democracies, except
Uruguay, according to a new survey released by the Chilean NGO
Latinbarometro last Saturday. Also, Venezuela is in first place in
several measures of political participation, compared to all other
Latin American countries.

According to the Latinobarometro survey, Venezuelans rank their
democracy as being more fully realized than the citizens of all other
surveyed countries do except Uruguay. On a scale of 1 to 10, where 1
means a country that is not democratic and 10 is a country that is
completely democratic, Venezuelans, on average, gave their own
democracy a score of 7.0. The Latin American average was 5.8, with
Uruguay having the highest score, of 7.2, and Paraguay the lowest, at
3.9.

Similarly, Venezuelans say more often than the citizens all other
countries except Uruguayans that they are satisfied with their
democracy. 57% of Venezuelans are happy with Venezuelan democracy,
which is the second highest percentage, with 66% of Uruguayans
expressing satisfaction. The average for all countries surveyed was
38%, with citizens of Peru, Ecuador, and Paraguay, expressing the
least satisfaction, of 23%, 22%, and 12% respectively.

For Venezuela, the percentage of citizens surveyed who indicated
satisfaction increased more since 1998, the year Chavez was elected,
than any other country. The percentage expressing satisfaction
increased from 32% to 57% in those eight years.

In terms of political participation, Venezuelans indicate that they
are more politically active than the citizens of any other surveyed
country. Venezuelans have the highest percentage of citizens that say
they discuss politics regularly (47%, average is 26%), who say that
they try to convince others on political matters (32%, average is
16%), who participate in demonstrations (26%, average is 12%), and who
say they are active in a political party (25%, average is 9%).

With regard to whether they believe that elections in their country
are 'clean,' Venezuelans answer in the affirmative 56% of the time,
which puts them in third place, after Uruguay (83%) and Chile (69%).
These were the only three where over half said they believed elections
were clean. On average, only 41% of Latin Americans expressed
confidence in elections in their country. Paraguayans (20%) and
Ecuadorians (21%) expressed the least confidence in their elections.

According to Latinobarometro, Venezuelans and Uruguayans expressed the
highest percentage of confidence that elections were the most
effective means to promote change in their country (both 71%),
compared to 57% for all of Latin America.

Latinobarometro has been conducting an annual poll in Latin American
countries for the past 13 years. The polls are financed by a variety
of multilateral agencies, such as the European Union, the Inter-
American Development Bank, and the World Bank. The 2006 poll was
conducted in 18 countries in the month of October 2006 and involved
interviews with over 20,000 people. Its margin of error is about 3%
(varies from country to country).

The Latinobarometro report contradicted the common perception that
Latin America was heading towards more authoritarian regimes with the
recent political shift towards the left. 'It is clear that there is no
authoritarian regression [in Latin America], which is demonstrated by
the fact that 14 presidents were substituted, for various reasons and
due to popular pressure prior to the end of their mandate and within
the valid legal framework in each of the countries,' said the report.

According to Latinobarometro, 'An important part of the errors of
perception about the evolution and development of the region are
produced by the false expectations that international elites have
about what the region should be doing.'

Countries included in the survey were Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil,
Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Dominican
Republic, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

Link: 2006 Latinobarometro Survey (Spanish, PDF file)
http://www.latinobarometro.org/fileadmin/intranet/Informe_Latinobarometro_2006.pdf
 
On May 26, 9:49 pm, Mary <collinse...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy December 20,
> 2006 By Gregory Wilpert
>
> Venezuelans view their democracy more favorably than the citizens of
> all other Latin American countries view their own democracies, except
> Uruguay, according to a new survey released by the Chilean NGO
> Latinbarometro last Saturday. Also, Venezuela is in first place in
> several measures of political participation, compared to all other
> Latin American countries.
> ...



Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
permit.
http://www.capitaldistrict-lp.org
 
On May 26, 9:10 pm, Werner <whetz...@mac.com> wrote:
> On May 26, 9:49 pm, Mary <collinse...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy December 20,
> > 2006 By Gregory Wilpert

>
> > Venezuelans view their democracy more favorably than the citizens of
> > all other Latin American countries view their own democracies, except
> > Uruguay, according to a new survey released by the Chilean NGO
> > Latinbarometro last Saturday. Also, Venezuela is in first place in
> > several measures of political participation, compared to all other
> > Latin American countries.
> > ...

>
> Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
> democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
> permit.http://www.capitaldistrict-lp.org



Werner:

As a Venezuelan and American let me offer a pragmatic view of those
poll results.

"It's the economy, stupid!"

Just like USA citizens were very content with Clinton, the reality
behind the support to him was the good economic times. The Internet
(and even the Y2K) were among the reasons for the economic boom. We
engineers had a lot more to do with the economic growth and yet
politicians, specially Clinton, took all the credit.

It is the same in Venezuela, where the price of the barrel of oil is
the foremost factor on whether people are satisfied or not. Any other
Venezuelan president (or even proto-dictator) would be very popular in
Venezuela, as long as the barrel is nearing $70. On the other hand, if
the oil barrel were cheap, Venezuelans would have removed Chavez a
long time ago.

We could draw a price of oil vs. "regard for democracy" chart with a
perfect correlation.

Back in the 70s, Carlos Andres Perez was a very popular Venezuelan
president, while the real reason was the oil boom caused by the Yom
Kippur war.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yom_Kippur_War

Arabs and Israelis killing each other was the real cause, while CAP
reaped the benefits. Other Venezuelan presidents were lame ducks based
on something they had absolutely no control of (you guessed it: the
price of the barrel of oil).

When it comes to citizen's satisfaction and approval, it doesn't
matter who is president in a country like Venezuela which is so
dependent on one source of income. The funny thing is the USA is not
that different.

"It's the economy, stupid!"

-Ramon
 
On 26 May 2007 19:10:05 -0700, Werner <whetzner@mac.com> wrote:

>On May 26, 9:49 pm, Mary <collinse...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>> Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy December 20,
>> 2006 By Gregory Wilpert
>>
>> Venezuelans view their democracy more favorably than the citizens of
>> all other Latin American countries view their own democracies, except
>> Uruguay, according to a new survey released by the Chilean NGO
>> Latinbarometro last Saturday. Also, Venezuela is in first place in
>> several measures of political participation, compared to all other
>> Latin American countries.
>> ...

>
>
>Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
>democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
>permit.
>http://www.capitaldistrict-lp.org



and you Werner......you will stand with the military-industrial
complex, is that correct?
 
On May 26, 10:42 pm, SnowWhite <SnowWh...@nospam.frontiernet.net>
wrote:
> On 26 May 2007 19:10:05 -0700, Werner <whetz...@mac.com> wrote:
>
> ...


>
> >Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
> >democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
> >permit.
> >http://www.capitaldistrict-lp.org

>
> and you Werner......you will stand with the military-industrial
> complex, is that correct?



I don't understand this comment or what it has to do with Venezuela.
But I worry more about the education-industrial complex or the health
care-industrial complex or the welfare-industrial complex.
http://capitaldistrict-lp.org/HealthCare.shtml
http://capitaldistrict-lp.org/Education.shtml
http://capitaldistrict-lp.org/Poverty.shtml
Those non-military complexes have become a lot more expensive than the
military.
 
SnowWhite wrote:
> On 26 May 2007 19:10:05 -0700, Werner <whetzner@mac.com> wrote:
>
>
>>On May 26, 9:49 pm, Mary <collinse...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>Poll: Venezuelans Have Highest Regard for Their Democracy December 20,
>>>2006 By Gregory Wilpert
>>>
>>>Venezuelans view their democracy more favorably than the citizens of
>>>all other Latin American countries view their own democracies, except
>>>Uruguay, according to a new survey released by the Chilean NGO
>>>Latinbarometro last Saturday. Also, Venezuela is in first place in
>>>several measures of political participation, compared to all other
>>>Latin American countries.
>>>...

>>
>>
>>Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
>>democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
>>permit.
>>http://www.capitaldistrict-lp.org

>
>
>
> and you Werner......you will stand with the military-industrial
> complex, is that correct?


He probably stads with the "We must get our hands on their
oil at any and all cost to the American people!" crowd.


--
B3
==
Governments should fear their people, not vice versa.
The Dems collapse shows they are bought and paid for too.
(They no longer care if their supporters notice.)
They think the voters only have TWO choices.
Where is Oliver Cromwell when you need him??
Hidden income audits for ALL politicians and political appointees.
 
Werner wrote:

>
> Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike Cuba. It's a the kind of
> democracy where the people have as much choice as their dictators
> permit.





Interesting notion of democracy - non unlike the US. It's a the kind of
democracy where the people have as much choice as the corporations, PAC's
and Jewish-economic-cult permit.
 
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