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Pollster Sees Lack Of Sarkisian Popularity

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  • Pollster Sees Lack Of Sarkisian Popularity

    POLLSTER SEES LACK OF SARKISIAN POPULARITY
    By Astghik Bedevian and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 4 2007

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian is far from being Armenia's most popular
    politician at the moment, even though he is seen as the favorite to
    win the forthcoming presidential election, a leading pro-establishment
    pollster said on Tuesday.

    Sarkisian is widely regarded as President Robert Kocharian's most
    likely successor, owing to his and his Republican Party's control of
    many government bodies and vast financial resources. Those levers are
    thought to have been instrumental in the party's landslide victory
    in the May parliamentary elections.

    According to Gevorg Poghosian, director of the Armenian Sociological
    Association (ASA), Sarkisian was only the country's fourth most
    popular politician as of July. Poghosian cited some of the hitherto
    unpublicized findings of a U.S.-funded opinion poll conducted by the
    ASA at the time.

    It was the latest in a series of quarterly surveys designed and
    coordinated by the Gallup Organization. The U.S. International
    Republican Institute (IRI) began commissioning them last year with
    the aim of gauging public opinion on key issues facing Armenia.

    One of the questions some 1,200 Armenians randomly interviewed
    on July 5-12 were asked to answer was: "Which of the Presidential
    candidates would you vote for if the Presidential elections were held
    next Sunday?"

    In Poghosian's words, Sarkisian's name was only fourth in the resulting
    rankings of potential presidential candidates. He said they were
    topped by Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, opposition leader Raffi
    Hovannisian and millionaire businessman Gagik Tsarukian. "They were
    followed by Serzh Sarkisian," he told RFE/RL.

    Poghosian refused to reveal their percentage figures, saying that
    the collated results of respondents' answers to the question are
    not subject to publication. He said the pollsters have only informed
    various politicians about their respective ratings.

    Poghosian only agreed to disclose popular support, as measured by the
    ASA, for former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, who is considering
    running for president. He said it stands at about 1.7 percent. "I
    don't see popular demand for the first president's return to power,"
    he added.

    Of the potential candidates covered by the poll only Hovannisian has
    publicized his rating on the website of his Zharangutyun (Heritage)
    party so far. According to information posted there, 19 percent
    of Armenians would have voted for the U.S.-born politician if the
    presidential election had been held in July.

    Oskanian, also a former U.S. citizen, left indications late last
    year that he too might join the presidential candidate. This fueled
    speculation that Kocharian would like to be succeeded by him, rather
    than Sarkisian. The Armenian leader has not yet publicly named his
    preferred successor.

    The findings of polls conducted by Poghosian's organization in the
    run-up to previous Armenian elections usually coincided with official
    vote results rejected as fraudulent by the opposition. Opposition
    leaders have long accused him of being used by the authorities
    for rigging polling data and thereby legitimizing what they see as
    electoral fraud. The pollster has denied the accusations, insisting
    on the credibility of ASA surveys.
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