Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

World Elections

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    Pakistani Views on Religion, Politics and Democracy

    Pakistanis are scheduled to go to the polls to elect a new parliament and governing party or coalition on May 11. But a Pew Research Center survey of Muslims around the world finds that Pakistani Muslims are among the least likely to express support for democracy.

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    Russians Have Their Own Ideas of Democracy

    The Kremlinโ€™s demand that the U.S. Agency for International Development cease its activities in Russia follows months of accusations by Vladimir Putin that recent anti-government protests in Russia are the result of meddling by the U.S. and other Western governments. However, many Russians may not be convinced that such meddling is a fact.

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    Have Americans Turned Inward?

    At a time when the U.S. is still at war in Afghanistan, when in the eyes of foreigners U.S. stature as the hegemonic power is in question, and when a euro crisis could derail the American economyโ€™s tenuous recovery, voters are turning inward. Nevertheless, when American national security is seen as threatened by Iran or terrorism, voters remain aggressively internationalist.

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    U.S. Voters Mull the Economy

    Public opinion surveys show that economic issues are a foremost concern for American voters. Recent history suggests that votersโ€™ choice on November 6 will have implications not just for the economic health of the U.S. but also the global economy.

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    Does World Want Romney or Obama?

    At the Republican and Democratic National Conventions, Americans will notionally be choosing their candidates for president of the United States. The worldโ€™s citizens get no say in this choice. Nevertheless, people outside the U.S. have definite opinions about Obama and some of the key issues in the campaign.

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    World to America: We want soft, not hard power

    With less than three months to go in the U.S. presidential election, the candidatesโ€™ debate over Americaโ€™s place in the world can only be expected to escalate. Recent public opinion surveys suggest that people outside the United States question American hard power and increasingly embrace U.S. soft power. Whoever is president in 2013, the success abroad of his foreign policy may depend on achieving the right balance in the exercise of American hard and soft power.

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    Morsiโ€™s Election Highlights Egyptian Views of Islamโ€™s Role in New Democracy

    The declaration of Mohamed Morsi as Egyptโ€™s first freely elected president marks a major milestone for a country that until February 2011 had spent nearly three decades under the authoritarian rule of Hosni Mubarak. At the same time, for significant numbers of Egyptians, Morsiโ€™s relatively narrow victory over former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq has the potential to raise questions about Islamโ€™s role in society.

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