Survey: 65% want Chavez leaves office in 2012...
posted on
Dec 04, 2009 05:21AM
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![]() Survey: 65% want Chavez leaves office in 2012 |
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friday, December 04, 2009 |
Increased ni-ni, the preference for Hugo Chávez left office in 2012 and the rejection of Cuban socialism that the President used as examples were some of the conclusions reached by Hinterlaces in his latest public opinion survey Those who do not identify with the government or the opposition coalesced and strengthened their majority to 55% of the country, increased by 5% compared to rates in May. Those are defined as Chavez or the opposition are divided the remaining minority of 27% and 14% respectively. "The ni-represent the country or national, is the overcoming of the antagonism, synthesize the extreme positions and overcome conflicting visions. They are the target audience and have the alternative discourse," the pollster concluded. Most respondents, 65%, agrees with President Chavez hands over power to new leadership in 2012, while 27% supports the idea that its mandate lasts until 2021. The poll indicates that "the great strength of Chavez is the absence of concrete alternatives to ensure the public answers to social problems." "The country demands a concept, a proposal containing Venezuelan nonpartisan, much less opposition. That illusion must assume the leadership of that majority is not defined as Chavez, but feels driven to choose the least bad option" said Oscar Schemel, president of Hinterlaces. With regard to the parliamentary elections of 2010, Hinterlaces notes that 7 of every 10 Venezuelans prefer a National Assembly where there is significant opposition presence. For research, Hinterlaces 1396 did random interviews in 20 states, between 13 and 22 November. Its sampling error is ± 2.8% with a confidence level of 96%. Presidential Management received a negative evaluation in the study. More than half of those polled believe that Chavez has not been efficient in solving social problems by describing his government between very bad and evil, 39% think it does between very good and well. Asked for his opinion on the possibility that Chavez established in the country such as Cuba's socialism, 87% of respondents expressed opposition to this political model. Source: Veneconomía |