BERLIN — While German youths turn mainly to the Internet for
election information, politicians including Chancellor Angela Merkel
have yet to harness support online like President Barack Obama and
others have done, according to a study released Wednesday.
A June
survey conducted by the Forsa research agency found 77 per cent of
Germans aged 18-29 were going online to find out what Germany's
political parties are promising before Sept. 27 parliamentary elections.
But
for the population overall, that drops to 45 per cent, according to the
study, which did not break down results for other age groups.
Most
young users get campaign news from Web sites run by newspapers and
magazines, but also are increasingly using social networks such as
Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, the study found. It said 28 per cent of
Germans aged 18-29 use social networks for campaign information, and 22
per cent read election blogs.
"Blogs and social online networks
are becoming more and more important for the political culture, because
they allow direct interaction between citizens and politicians," said
August-Wilhelm Scheer, the head of Bitkom, the German Association for
Information Technology, Telecommunications and New Media, presenting
the study's findings.
Still, the Germans' use of the Internet is
a far cry from American online participation during the U.S. election
campaign in 2008, in which the presidential candidates recruited
millions of followers on Twitter, Facebook or Flickr.
As of
Wednesday, Merkel had 14,400 supporters on Facebook while her election
challenger Frank-Walter Steinmeier had just over 5,200.
By
comparison, President Barack Obama could boast more than 6.6 million
Facebook supporters, while his Twitter stream has more than 1.8 million
followers. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has more than 1 million.
Merkel doesn't use Twitter at all.
"By using the Net, he (Obama)
managed to mobilize people ... to create a movement in the real world,"
said Regine Bossert, a communications expert at the Free University of
Berlin.
All German parties and candidates have Web sites and many
update their blogs regularly, but it is not clear whether online
campaigning could affect September elections significantly as only 65
per cent of all Germans use the Internet. Only 40 per cent of people
older than 50 go online.
The Forsa agency surveyed 1,005 people of voting age in June for the poll, and did not give a margin of error.
Source:
The Canadian Press