People with right-wing views are more likely to choose a leader who shares their religious beliefs, the Pew Research Centre told Euronews.
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00:00Around 84% of the world population is religious and the number is expected to grow.
00:09In some countries, religious beliefs and voting intentions are closely related.
00:15Many people want political leaders who share their same faith and practices.
00:21That's particularly true for some Asian and African states.
00:25A new Pew Research Center survey found
00:29that also for some European nations, particularly in Eastern Europe.
00:34In Poland, for example, 52% want their leader to practice their same religion.
00:42In Greece, it's 42%. In Hungary, 40%.
00:47People who identify with the right end of the political spectrum
00:52are more likely to say things such as
00:56that it's important for my leader to have religious beliefs that are the same as mine
01:01or have strong religious beliefs, even if they differ from my own.
01:05And so, while it isn't necessarily true in every single country,
01:09that is a broad sort of pattern that we do see.
01:14Western and Northern Europe stand at the opposite side of the spectrum.
01:19In the Netherlands, only 15% of people care about that.
01:24Likewise, in Germany, the UK, France and Spain,
01:29less than a quarter of respondents believe religion is relevant to their political choices.
01:35Italy is the only exception among Europe's biggest economies,
01:39with 30% of people wanting their leader to follow the same religion.