POLL
B Y GREENBERG QUINLAN ROSNER
LEONEL FERNÁNDEZ
(DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)
HUGO CHÁVEZ
(VENEZUELA)
CRISTINA FERNÁNDEZ
DE KIRCHNER
(ARGENTINA)
PORTRAITS BY CHRIS LYONS
Maybe Washington policy looks worse the
farther you are from the U.S. That would be
one conclusion from the results of surveys
by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner. The surveys
were conducted in Venezuela (June 24 to July
6, 2010), the Dominican Republic (April 29 to
May 5) and Argentina (May 26 to June 17). Two
results stand out. The first is that conventional
wisdom that President Hugo Chávez’ regular
diatribes against the U.S. government are tapping a wellspring of anti-Americanism is not
true. A little less than half of the Venezuelans
surveyed approved of the U.S.’s policies toward
the region and toward their country, and 63
percent disapprove of President Chávez’ obstreperousness with the gringos. The second
is that support for U.S. policies toward the
region drops off the farther you get from the
U.S., with just under 60 percent of Dominicans
in favor of U. S. policy in the region, dropping
down to 19 percent in Argentina. Who said distance makes the heart grow fonder?
Approval of U. S.
policies toward
Latin America (%)
29%
disapprove
46%
disapprove
44%
disapprove
Approval of U. S.
policies toward
their country (%)
58%
APPROVE
47%
APPROVE
22%
APPROVE
30%
disapprove
44%
disapprove
41%
disapprove
Approval of their
leader’s management
of relations with the
United States (%)
60%
APPROVE
33%
APPROVE
29%
APPROVE
29%
disapprove
63%
disapprove
41%
disapprove
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS SURVEY, VISIT WWW.AMERICASQUARTERLY.ORG/
GREENBERGQUINLANROSNERPOLL