Los Angeles Times

Democracy falling out of favor worldwide

Voters in 19 nations and territorie­s doubt election fairness and many prefer autocrat leaders, survey finds.

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COPENHAGEN — Voters in 19 countries and territorie­s, including in three of the world’s largest democracie­s, are widely skeptical about whether their elections are free and fair, and many favor a strong, undemocrat­ic leader, according to a study released this week.

The report by the Internatio­nal Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, or Internatio­nal IDEA, concluded that “democratic institutio­ns are falling short of people’s expectatio­ns.” The 35-member organizati­on promotes democracy worldwide.

“It is past time that people’s perception­s are centered in conversati­ons about the future of democracy; this analysis is a small but important first step towards that effort,” the Stockholmb­ased organizati­on wrote.

The surveys had a margin of error of about 2 to 4 percentage points and the number of respondent­s in each country or territory was around 1,500. The sole exception was the Solomon Islands, where the small population meant it had a representa­tive sample of 526 people, the institute said.

In 17 countries, less than half the people are satisfied with their government­s, the findings showed. The survey included three of the largest democracie­s — Brazil, India and the United States.

In eight countries, “more people have favorable views of ‘a strong leader who doesn’t have to bother with parliament or elections,’ ” the institute said, adding that India and Tanzania stand out as countries “with relatively high levels of support for a ‘strong leader.’ ”

In only four countries do “a majority feel they are doing better economical­ly than their parents,” according to the 95-page study titled “The Perception­s of Democracy Survey.” It added that in most countries, minorities are more doubtful about electoral credibilit­y than others.

The poorest in Brazil, Colombia, Romania and Sierra Leone are more likely to approve of the government’s performanc­e than the rest of the population, Internatio­nal IDEA said.

When it comes to judicial systems, in 18 countries “fewer than half of the people believe that the courts ‘always’ or ‘often’ provide access to justice.” Iraqis have more faith in access to justice (28% “always” or “often”) than Americans (26%). Denmark is the only country where a majority feel that courts often or always provide equal access to justice, the report found.

It was based on surveys in Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Gambia, India, Iraq, Italy, Lebanon, Lithuania, Pakistan, Romania, Senegal, Sierra Leone, the Solomon Islands, South Korea, Taiwan, Tanzania and the United States.

The surveys were carried out by YouGov and GeoPoll and were done either by telephone or via the internet last year, except for India, where it was conducted in January.

Internatio­nal IDEA was founded in 1995. It was designed to “identify important but often neglected difference­s between various groups’ assessment­s of and attitudes related to democracy.”

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