APRIL 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Roughly 55% of Georgians feel the country is heading in the wrong direction, a new poll for the US political group International Republican Institute (IRI) said.
This is a higher proportion than at any time since September 2009, during the aftermath of a brief war against Russia in 2008, when 63% of respondents said the country was heading in the wrong direction.
It is also, and this is important, the first time since March 2010 that a higher proportion of people have said that Georgia is heading in the wrong direction rather than the right direction. The IRI poll is, perhaps, the most accurate in Georgia and is a decent weather-mast to judge the general mood.
And it’ll make nasty reading for the governing Georgian Dream coalition which is having to deal with various economic problems as well as internal squabbling and accusations that it is using the Georgian justice system to settle old scores with officials who served under former president Mikheil Saakashvili.
In the IRI poll people’s main worries were the economy and Russian aggression. Over 60% of the respondents said the economy had worsened in the past couple of months and 76% said that Russia was the main threat to Georgia.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 226, published on April 8 2015)