Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

People dont have that much confidence on the surveys in Pakistan, it would be interesting to keep an eye on them leading to the polls and if the results conform to them or not.

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

An interesting thing to note from the survey between 2009 and 2012 is that PPP has lost about 6 % (22 to 16), where as PMLN has lost 30 % (57 to 27) where as PTI has gained 25 % (6 to 31) which would naturally be most of PMLN and some PPP which is reflected in the poll as well.

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

^ Has ANP lost support?
I would assume that PTI will gain votes from KPK as well.

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

I have some friends from KPK and they tell that PTI is doing great there...

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

According to the survey anp has gained from 5 to 13 percent in kp, the main losers there are pmln and ppp. Mqm has kept its votes intact .

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

if the polling company is off by enough for PTI to lose KP or Balochistan then it should really pack up and leave.

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

  • It is surprising to see ANP gaining when it supports the war against Taliban. If this is true then people of KP endorse this policy.
  • MQM merely able to keep the votes intact is actually its loss. It was trying hard to gain in other areas.

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

yes some people do support the war on terror, basically i think pashtun nationalism is growing in kp...

According to Latest Survey

**According to the latest Survey 7/10 people want Imran Khan as their Leader


Its a PDF File !

:jhanda:**

Re: IRI survey on political parties of Pakistan

merged the threads

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

This 'poll' may be showing people's favor/like the party, but when it comes down to actually voting, would people vote that way? I doubt.

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

We have seen surveys first time in Pakistan during 1969-70 .
I exactly remember that according to those JI **was the most popular party in Pakistan.
At the End that was lowest one .
Now ChandaKhors are spending charity money on every thing .
I have an information that they are under some agreement with Google
**Bap ka mal hay lagaiay jao .

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

:omg:

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

:sadaf:

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

What has all of this to do with google? Another Jewish conspiracy? :(

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

Agar bap ka mal halal nahin, to phir jaddi pushti swiss bank account kaisay halal huway? :hmmm:

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

Yeh meray liay khofnak hoga
Magar Bap kay Mal ka track record bhi kisi kay liay achha naheen .
Main nay to Muhawarah likha tha
Sach say graiz karain
Nirralon ka dil nazak ,Damagh kamzor hota hay Aur garmi bhi boht hay , Kharab bhi ho jatay hain .

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

:rotfl:

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

http://www.pewglobal.org/files/2012/06/PAKISTAN0029.png

The dismal public mood is reflected in poor ratings for the leaders of the incumbent Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), President Asif Ali Zardari and former Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani. Only 14% view Zardari favorably, little changed from last year, but down significantly from 64% in 2008. Gilani, who was recently convicted of contempt and dismissed from office by Pakistan’s highest court, fares only somewhat better, at 36% favorable. Gilani received similarly poor ratings last year, although as recently as 2010 a majority of Pakistanis expressed a favorable view of him.
The most popular leader included on the survey is Imran Khan. Seven-in-ten Pakistanis offer a favorable opinion of the former cricket star and leader of the Pakistani Tehreek-e-Insaf party (PTI). This is essentially unchanged from last year, but up significantly from 2010.

Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is also generally well-regarded – about six-in-ten offer a positive view of the leader of the country’s main opposition party, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N). Sharif has consistently received high marks in recent years, although his ratings are down somewhat from the 79% registered in 2009.
Slightly more than half rate Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry favorably. Ratings for both the army chief and the chief justice have slipped slightly since 2010. Former President (and military chief) Pervez Musharraf, who has occasionally suggested he may return to Pakistani politics, receives relatively poor ratings.

Pakistani Public Opinion Ever More Critical of U.S. | Pew Global Attitudes Project

Re: Surveys on political parties of Pakistan

According to the latest IRI’s survey, PTI’s popularity goes down sharply, while PMLN is up. What could be the reasons for this? Has the PMLN been able to convince the people that PTI and PPP are the same? Or the relentless bombardment of the media on PTI? Shaukat Khanum issue, or something else.

According to this survey:

PMLN has gone up from 24 % to 28 %

PTI from 31 % to 24 %

PPP from 16 % to 14 %

Imran admits slump in PTI