This is Steven Deketelaere speaking, chairman of Proximity Panels. We organised the 17-country study about the EU-president, about which you expressed some doubts on this tribune.
All details about this study can be found on www.proximitypanels.com. All technical details are there at your disposal.
In case you need some extra feedback, please contact me on steven.deketelaere@proximitypanels.com.
Just for your info: As from November 2009 Proximity Panels was founded. Proximity Panels "unites the best of local research panels worldwide.
As a PR-promo stunt, Proximity Panels decided to organise an international opinion poll concerning the election of the first European President. It did so at this speed of light: the entire set-up, national media-partner search for exclusive publication of the results, fieldwork and last but not least data-analysis & reporting, only took 5 working days in total. The initiative was launched on November 11, 2009. Since there was as tight deadline, decision on the first EU-President by the European top politicians is foreseen on November 19th in Brussels, this was the ideal occasion to launch Proximity Panels publicly since it had to go fast so high-performance level could be proven and since Proximity Panels is a European initiative founded by European companies for which the event of a First EU-President is not just very interesting for an opinion poll but also very symbolic.
Best regards,
Steven Deketelaere
Based on the results a large European opinion study from the international opinion polling agency Proximity Panels, it became apparent that the Belgian Prime Minister, Herman Van Rompuy, is only known by 12% of the European citizens. The name Tony Blair (UK) on the other hand rings a bell for 70% of the European citizens. Second best, but lagging behind, is Mary Robinson from Ireland who is known by 1 out of 5 Europeans (19%). The number 1 favorite candidate by far is Tony Blair. Almost 1/3 of the Europeans are convinced he makes an ideal candidate. The Belgian Herman Van Rompuy only appeals to 5% or 1 out of 20. On the other hand, the fact that he is Belgian seems to make up for it, since only 1% vetoes a Belgian candidate, whereas putting a Brit in charge would be a bad move according to 16% of the Europeans.
The number 1 favorite candidate by far is Tony Blair. Almost 1/3 of the Europeans are convinced he makes an ideal candidate. The Belgian Herman Van Rompuy only appeals to 5% or 1 out of 20.
On the other hand, the fact that he is Belgian seems to make up for it, since only 1% vetoes a Belgian candidate, whereas putting a Brit in charge would be a bad move according to 16% of the Europeans.
First of all, let me point out that I was responding to John Lichfield's quote of your poll. And he is wrong on two points:
Your poll further skews the issue by referring exclusively to the post of "European President". This post does not exist. It's "President of the European Council". The difference is not trivial. The compromise that resulted from the negotiations on the Constitutional Treaty (that became the Lisbon Treaty) was that this post should not be a "big" one in which a high-profile politician would draw power towards himself, but a lower-profile one that called for a more modest figure capable of advancing the work of the European Council and finding agreement between the member states. (You'll find backing for this in a piece I wrote, A-B-C, The Seven Dwarfs, And The Giant Bird).
So when your poll refers to the European President, you are not asking the right question. You are presupposing the "big" presidential position Blair would have liked to have, and not the lower-profile reality. (This is what I meant by saying "President of Europe" is a dead giveaway). This unfortunately slants your poll (whether you meant this or not) in a direction favourable to the big celebrity, Tony Blair.
We too organized something around this new appointment. As unpaid volunteers (European Tribune is not a business) a small group of us ran an online petition. We did this with no budget at all, and no advertising. Even in these conditions, the Stop Blair! petition gathered over 45,000 signatures, of which well over 43,000 are from all EU nationalities, against Blair's appointment. Not the same as a poll? No, but significative all the same of a strong current of anti-Blair feeling across the EU.