When asked who their preferred candidate was, just 3.8 per cent of Egyptian respondents chose Trump. In Saudi Arabia, only 6 per cent favoured Trump. (File Photo)
Jerusalem:
An Israeli college has conducted an opinion poll of attitudes inside Egypt and Saudi Arabia and found that there was virtually no support for presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in the two Arab countries.
The survey, conducted by the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, could signal trouble for Trump if he wins the November election and sets out to devise a Mideast policy. Egypt and Saudi Arabia are two of America's most powerful and important allies in the Arab world.
When asked who their preferred candidate was, just 3.8 per cent of Egyptian respondents chose Trump. In Saudi Arabia, only 6 per cent favored Trump.
The presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, did better, though support was far from overwhelming. In Egypt, 35.7 per cent of respondents chose Clinton, while in Saudi Arabia that number was 30.2 per cent.
"The overall pattern is that most people ... do not support either candidate, but they hate Trump essentially and one out of three support Hillary," said survey director Alex Mintz, director of the IDC's Institute for Policy and Strategy.
Mintz said Trump's poor ratings were likely the result of his inflammatory comments toward Muslims. Following the attacks by terrorists in Paris and San Bernardino, California, last year, Trump called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the U.S. He has also spoken against accepting Syrian refugees.
Mintz said the large number of respondents who preferred neither candidate - 41 per cent in Egypt and 50 per cent in Saudi Arabia - signaled general unhappiness with both of them.
But the discontent with the U.S. runs deeper than the presidential candidates. Just 16.7 per cent of respondents in Egypt described President Barack Obama as being good or very good for the Muslim world. In Saudi Arabia, that figure was 20.1 per cent.
The survey interviewed 471 respondents in Egypt, with a margin of error of 4.5 percentage points, and 464 people in Saudi Arabia, with a 4.6 point margin of error, over a six-week period.
In a novel approach, it was carried out by telephone by Arabic speakers who said they were calling from the Institute for Policy and Strategy. If pressed, they told respondents that they were located in Israel.
"We are not hiding anything," said Eli Mograbi, who helped run the survey. Israel has a peace agreement with Egypt, but no formal relations with Saudi Arabia.
The survey was released Friday ahead of the IDC's Herzliya Conference, an annual gathering of active and retired officials from around the world set to take place next week. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as well as top Israeli politicians and security officials are scheduled to deliver addresses.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
The survey, conducted by the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, could signal trouble for Trump if he wins the November election and sets out to devise a Mideast policy. Egypt and Saudi Arabia are two of America's most powerful and important allies in the Arab world.
When asked who their preferred candidate was, just 3.8 per cent of Egyptian respondents chose Trump. In Saudi Arabia, only 6 per cent favored Trump.
The presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, did better, though support was far from overwhelming. In Egypt, 35.7 per cent of respondents chose Clinton, while in Saudi Arabia that number was 30.2 per cent.
"The overall pattern is that most people ... do not support either candidate, but they hate Trump essentially and one out of three support Hillary," said survey director Alex Mintz, director of the IDC's Institute for Policy and Strategy.
Mintz said Trump's poor ratings were likely the result of his inflammatory comments toward Muslims. Following the attacks by terrorists in Paris and San Bernardino, California, last year, Trump called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the U.S. He has also spoken against accepting Syrian refugees.
Mintz said the large number of respondents who preferred neither candidate - 41 per cent in Egypt and 50 per cent in Saudi Arabia - signaled general unhappiness with both of them.
But the discontent with the U.S. runs deeper than the presidential candidates. Just 16.7 per cent of respondents in Egypt described President Barack Obama as being good or very good for the Muslim world. In Saudi Arabia, that figure was 20.1 per cent.
The survey interviewed 471 respondents in Egypt, with a margin of error of 4.5 percentage points, and 464 people in Saudi Arabia, with a 4.6 point margin of error, over a six-week period.
In a novel approach, it was carried out by telephone by Arabic speakers who said they were calling from the Institute for Policy and Strategy. If pressed, they told respondents that they were located in Israel.
"We are not hiding anything," said Eli Mograbi, who helped run the survey. Israel has a peace agreement with Egypt, but no formal relations with Saudi Arabia.
The survey was released Friday ahead of the IDC's Herzliya Conference, an annual gathering of active and retired officials from around the world set to take place next week. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as well as top Israeli politicians and security officials are scheduled to deliver addresses.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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