Press Release Summary: PARIS (Reuters) - Just one percent of French people want Republican candidate John McCain to win the U.S. presidential election, and western Europeans overwhelmingly favor his rival Barack Obama, an opinion poll showed on Friday. In Germany, where Obama held his rally, five percent of people supported McCain while 72 percent backed Obama.
Press Release Body: Barack Obama made history on the final day of the marathon Democratic nomination fight, becoming the first person of color to lead a major party's national ticket. He beat back a resilient Hillary Rodham Clinton, once viewed as the inevitable choice. Obama's call for change won over millions of young people, new voters, highly educated whites, and disaffected liberals tired of Clinton and her husband -- and demonstrated to blacks that he could win. PARIS (Reuters) - Just one percent of French people want Republican candidate John McCain to win the U.S. presidential election, and western Europeans overwhelmingly favor his rival Barack Obama, an opinion poll showed on Friday. In Germany, where Obama held his rally, five percent of people supported McCain while 72 percent backed Obama. BNN (Business Network News) recently interviewed Kate Kay, who explained that the Barack Obama 2008 campaign also used pay-per-click advertising on Google for different purposes than the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign.