NEWSWEEK excerpt:

Europe is thrilled by the prospect that whatever happens this week it
will mean the end of George W. Bush, and enraptured by the sheer
spectacle of it all. 

James Dickmeyer, the director of the Foreign Press Centers, which
helps international press cover U.S. political campaigns, says foreign
journalists swarmed not only the Iowa caucuses but even the Iowa State
Fair's Straw Poll, which they had never covered before. 

Bob Worcester, the American-born founder of the London-based polling
and research firm Mori, has worked in more than 40 countries, and says
he has "never ever seen any election in which so many people in so
many places have been so interested."

It's very clear who they are interested in: Barack Obama. John McCain
and Sarah Palin are by all accounts still in the race, but McCain has
become a political cipher in a world that has of late tuned into Obama
24/7. [...] 

Obama went into Election Day with a steady lead in U.S. polls,
averaging about 50 percent to 44 percent for McCain, but he was headed
for a landslide around the world, topping polls in virtually every
nation often by strong margins: 70 percent in Germany, 75 percent in
China and so on. 

Somewhere along the road to the White House, Obama became the world's
candidateĀ—a reminder that for all the talk of America's decline, for
all the visceral hatred of Bush, the rest of the world still looks
upon the United States as a land of hope and opportunity. 

"The Obama adventure is what makes America magical," French State
Secretary for Foreign Affairs and Human Rights Rama Yade, a Senegalese
immigrant who is the only black member of Nicolas Sarkozy's
government, recently told Le Parisien.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/166910



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