The French Favor Obama In Presidential Race -- Which Shows They Have Much To Learn
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- The people of France have spoken on the subject of the U.S.
presidential election. Naturally, you couldn't care less about what anyone else
(let alone the French) thinks about you or your electoral choices, right?
The French aren't particularly interested in appearing too keen on America,
either. A Harris Interactive poll found that 66 percent of respondents either
care little about the U.S. presidential race or not at all. However, should a
gun be put to their head mid Gallic shrug, 88 percent of them would take Barack
Obama, merci, with 10 percent choosing Mitt Romney.
When this modern-day underground French Resistance of 10 percent who dared to
admit a preference for Romney (at great risk of being blacklisted from Parisian
soirées) were asked to toss out some reasons why Romney was their choice, the
most frequently occurring words included, in descending order of frequency:
"Obama," "more," "change" and "did." So ironically, Romney now owns the term
"change" -- at least in France. And apparently, he also has the resounding
advantage of not being Obama.
Presumably, these 10 percent also have higher expectations than what they feel
Obama has proven capable of delivering - hence the "more" reference - and credit
Romney with a history of positive actions.
Those who would opt for another Obama term most frequently justified their
choice with words like "president," "social," "did," "good" and "Romney." So
Obama appears to benefit from already having his behind in the chair, from the
fact that he isn't Romney, and for being seen as more social-welfare oriented.
Also, they seem to think he "did" some "good" things.
But here's the kicker: While 60 percent of French Obama supporters feel "closer
to Obama's values than those of Mitt Romney," only 36 percent believe that Obama
is "competent," and a mere 14 percent believe that Obama is in the best position
to find solutions to the fiscal crisis. These views can hardly be chalked up to
party preference, either, since only 30 percent of Obama supporters said they
preferred Democrats to Republicans.
Among the president's supporters, French men prefer Obama's values more than
French women do, 63 percent to 58 percent. And only 4 percent of those who
prefer Obama say that it's because he's black, with the most uneducated
demographic expressing the highest degree of racial preference. The same
least-educated demographic -- those lacking a high school diploma -- was also
most likely to believe that Obama has a better shot at achieving world peace.
The most educated respondents -- those with more than two years of
post-secondary schooling -- were least likely to consider Obama competent.
Perhaps the weirdest aspect of the Harris Poll results is that voters who
preferred center-right former French President Nicolas Sarkozy had a higher
level of disagreement with Obama's values than Socialist French President
Francois Hollande's voters, yet these respondents were almost twice as likely to
find Obama "competent" as were Hollande supporters.
Maybe this is a sign that the French center-right has a greater tolerance for,
and understanding of, the complexities of governance, having witnessed and
sympathized with Sarkozy's perpetual struggle to enact even the most moderate
French reforms in a system locked down by special interest groups, various
domestic and international realities, and the mentality of the people
themselves.
Hollande supporters were least likely to find Obama competent -- mirroring a
similar discontent in France with Hollande himself, despite the fact that he was
elected only five months ago. Another recent Harris Interactive poll found that
only 55 percent of those who voted for Hollande in the presidential election
feel he's doing a better job than Sarkozy would have done, and 40 percent of
Hollande voters admitted that it wouldn't have made much difference if Sarkozy
had been re-elected.
The lesson? It's not easy to please leftists. Their concept of the world exists
on a cloud of marijuana smoke. Their pet politicians, spun from cotton candy,
regale them with warm thoughts and fuzzy feelings -- until reality comes along
and douses the whole works, forcing them to wake up to a sticky mess.
It's a lesson the French left and their sympathizers clearly haven't learned.
Will American voters prove to be any more astute?
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN