Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The trust rating of the Cavaliere to its historic low

The confidence rating of Silvio Berlusconi, faced with the law and weakened internationally, dropped 2% in a month to reach its low of 31%, according to a poll published Monday, April 18 by the institute IPR. 31% of Italians talk of "very" or "somewhat" trust the prime minister, against 33% in March and 40% in December, while the percentage who have "little" or "not at all" increased confidence to 58% against 55% in March, according to the survey conducted between 14 and 16 April on a sample of 1000 persons on behalf of La Repubblica (left).

"The April survey shows a scenario where the government (...) and (...) parties that support appear under pressure due to the business center of the political battle in recent weeks as Libya or Tunisian refugee management, "wrote the institute that conducts these surveys every month since the return of Berlusconi to power in April 2008.

Mr Berlusconi is within the scope of three trials, one for statutory rape, while Italy only to hear his voice within the European Union both on Libya on immigration. "There is no twilight of Berlusconi," he said at a rally in support Letizia Moratti, Mayor of Milan and outgoing candidate for municipal mid-May, adding that judges "do fail to get rid "of him.

"This is for a raid Cavaliere virtually constant for over two years. The fall of 9 percentage points from the beginning of the year by 17 points compared to January 2010 and 25 points from January 2009. He lost exactly half of those who trusted him when he peaked in the polls with 62% in October 2008.

" The government recorded its worst result with 23% satisfied, down 3% from the previous month, while the percentage of dissatisfied is 62%, up 2% from March. The Institute notes that "for the first time" left over "slightly" right in the polls. "A hypothetical coalition of the main left parties" would get 41.5%, up 0.3% in March, while the right would descend to 41%, losing 1.2% a month.

(...) These movements are not very significant in terms of numbers but they express a sense of the electorate that is certainly not pro-government parties.

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