If the parliamentary elections had been held at the end of June, the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) would have received the support of 43,6 percent of citizens, the Socialist People's Party (SNP) would have voted for 18,2 percent of citizens, the New Serbian Democracy would have won 9,4 percent, Positive Black Gora 8,3, while PzP and SDP would receive 7,1 and 6,8 percent of voters, respectively.
This was shown by the research of Miloš Bešić's Defacto agency, conducted for the needs of Positive Montenegro in the period from June 20 to 28 in 19 municipalities on a representative sample of all voters.
At the same time, the Bosniak party with the support of 2,9 percent would not be able to pass the census and thus get the parliamentary seats, while, according to the results of the survey, the newly formed political club Pravedna Crna Gora would win the support of 0,9 percent of Montenegrin citizens.
Compared to CEDEM's public opinion survey from December last year, which Bešić is also behind, the support for parties in power has weakened by, on average, two percent.
The Bosniak party with the support of 2,9 percent would not be able to pass the census
Thus, DPS was supported by 2011 percent of citizens in December 45,8, compared to 43,6 percent in June of this year, while support for SDP dropped from 8,6 percent in December to 6,8 percent in June.
An increase in trust by one percent was recorded by SNP, which in December 2011 had the support of 17,2 percent, while Nova and PzP maintained a stable rating in relation to the December survey. Nova had a drop of 0 percent, by which PzP strengthened.
Decreased satisfaction with the work of the Government
When it comes to the results of the Government of Igor Lukšić so far, 13,6 and 30,3 percent of respondents rated them as "very good" and "mostly good", which coincides with the number of DPS voters. At the same time, 21,6 and 18,4 percent of respondents assessed the results of Lukšić's cabinet as "very or mostly bad", while 16,1 percent of respondents did not answer.
Compared to the December results, it can be stated that satisfaction with the performance of Lukšić's government has decreased, when 18,3 and 42,3 percent of respondents were "very" or "mostly satisfied".
34,7, or 27,5 percent of those surveyed expressed a very or mostly positive attitude toward the flag, in contrast to 10, or 11,9 percent of them, who evaluated it negatively. The data are similar when it comes to the coat of arms, towards which 35,5 and 27,3 percent have a very or mostly positive attitude. The ratio to the national anthem is the same - 35,3, or 25 percent.
Answering the question in which direction is Montenegro moving, 38 percent of respondents believe that the country is going in a bad direction, in contrast to 33,4 percent of citizens who think that the country is going in a good direction, while 28,6 percent could not estimate in which direction moving in the direction of Montenegro.
Compared to the December survey, which was conducted by CEDEM, this represents a big change because the percentage of pessimists has increased significantly. Thus, at the end of last year, as many as 47 percent of those surveyed believed that Montenegro was on the right path, while only 2 percent believed that it was on the wrong path.
Half of citizens believe in the European Union
The results also showed that 62,5 percent of citizens support the country's membership in the European Union, every fifth respondent is against it, while 16 percent have no definite opinion.
As for trust in the institutions of the system, the survey showed that citizens trust the education system the most (55,3%), followed by the health system (52,3%), the President of Montenegro (50,7%), and the European Union (50,6 .XNUMX%).
The Serbian Orthodox Church is trusted by 48,9%, while the CPC is trusted by 25,2%, and the Islamic community and the Catholic Church are trusted by 22,5% and 19,9% respectively. It is the first time that the Islamic community and the Catholic Church are found in a survey.
The police (46%), the Government of Montenegro (44,5%) and NGOs (41,1%) are further in terms of trust. The Assembly and the Montenegrin judiciary are trusted by 38,6 and 38,4 percent of respondents, respectively, and the Army of Montenegro by 37,6 percent, while political parties are trusted by 32,3 percent of the surveyed citizens.
The data also show that 33,6 percent of respondents trust NATO, and 28,3 percent trust the Hague Tribunal.
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