Posted on 10/11/2012 2:48:53 PM PDT by NYer
BOSTON, Mass. — Stop the drone attacks. Be tougher on terror. Help immigrants. Boost trade. Fix your economy, and help us fix ours while you’re at it. The world has plenty of gripes with the United States.
And they cover a lot of ground. How US policies play out overseas has been shaping countries’ trajectories for generations, much to the international community’s chagrin or delight.
Foreign affairs might not be the focus for most US voters, who tend to worry more about the economy and hospital bills. But talk to people on the street from Havana to Hong Kong and you’ll get an earful on how Washington should do less or more to influence their lives.
GlobalPost tapped into its extensive network of foreign correspondents, asking more than 100 people in 20 countries for their views on the United States and who they want to win the November election.
The hodgepodge of results culminate in the present project, “The US election: What if the world could vote?”
We found that the global community is no swing state. It’s firmly pro-Barack Obama: 65 percent of interviewees said they’d vote to re-elect him, while 18 percent favored Republican Mitt Romney (the remaining 17 percent was undecided or preferred neither candidate). Some 54 percent said their opinion of the US has improved with Obama in the White House.
Journalistic, not scientific
The findings are based on "on-the-street" interviews conducted over the summer, a time when Romney’s candidacy was still officially “presumptive.” More than half of the interviewees didn’t know who he was. And some struggled to pronounce his name.
“What? Mitchrom? … never heard of him,” a 36-year-old South African stationary shop attendant said.
“Romali? He's Indian guy, na?” said a 26-year-old digital marketing executive in New Delhi.
Those were replies to the first of a set of questions asked to each interviewee: Have you heard of Mitt Romney? Do you know who’s running for president of the United States? Whom would you vote for and why? Will the 2012 US election affect your country? What’s the most important thing the next president should do? Has your opinion of the US improved or worsened since Barack Obama took office?
More from GlobalPost: Dear Mr. President — give the next commander in chief a piece of your mind
The reporting was not anonymous. It uses names and faces, ages and occupations. The correspondents held real discussions with their subjects and photographed them. The assignment also called for the interviews to focus on as diverse a group as possible.
This all makes the project different from opinion polling. This exercise was journalistic, not scientific.
Foreign affairs may trail behind economics on the US electorate's worry list. But that doesn't mean it's unimportant. Now, thanks to flare-ups last month in the Middle East, foreign policy took a shocking leap to prominence in the 2012 US election race. Ordinary voices from abroad could resonate even more today in a country struggling to understand the world outside it.
Read Highway 2012: Foreign policy finally front and center
In GlobalPost's world vote project, the people on the street were not always forthcoming. GlobalPost's Erin Cunningham was struck by Egyptians' reluctance to speak their minds or allow their photos taken.
"It was surprisingly difficult to coax Egyptians into talking about US politics — surprising because Egyptians are not known for holding back their opinions," she said.
"When I lived in Cairo in 2006, at the height of the Iraq War, almost every Egyptian I encountered had something to say about Bush, the war, and American imperialism," she added. "When conducting these interviews, most of the Egyptians I interviewed were quite detached from trends in US politics."
Four out of five Egyptians she interviewed picked Obama. One, an undecided, said whoever the next president is, "He should relieve the Palestinians of the occupation and their bad situation."
The claim that Obama would handily win a race against Romney outside the US is supported by other respected surveys. In September, a Gallup International poll gave a world race to Obama in a landslide — 81 percent.
...then they can stop sending him money
Good thing the world doesn’t vote.
You forgot the Technicolor Barf Alert
The “world” is trying to do to the US what they did to South Africa.
Does that mean I get to vote?
I would vote Romney in a heartbeat.
Oh dear...
So much for Willard’s foreign policy...
Cool, then Obama should be president of the rest of the world.
Romney would probably carry Poland and a few other former Soviet states.
Being that the vast majority of the world would like to see America reduced to a third world country it’s to be expected they would vote for Obama.
This just proves that the rest of the world is really F***ed up, but we knew that already.
Blame America first finally pays off...for Barry!
Don’t forget, Obama’s got the entire Muslim world!
Considering that there are over a billion muslims....
Well, perhaps those in foreign countries who support Mr. Obama should try to recruit him to be in charge of their countries!
They can have him, we don’t want him.
Would Obama win with foreign voters because (1) people worldwide believe Obama would be good for America or (2) because people outside the United States would like to see America weakened so that their countries can be stronger in comparison to ours?
As an American, I would like a stronger America far more than I would like a weak country divided by envy and hate - and with ever increasing numbers of people not temporarily supported through crises but permanently dependent on government for their basic needs. As an American, I have difficulty imagining that anyone could possibly do a worse job in our White House than Obama has done over the past four years. As an American, I have no interest in the opinions of those who wish Obama on our country, other than as a warning about their ill will toward the free world. I will, however, happily offer Obama as a gift to lead any country that hates freedom so much as to accept Obama in power.
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