Image of the United States has plunged
under Trump, survey shows
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[June 27, 2017]
By Noah Barkin
BERLIN (Reuters) - The image of the United
States has deteriorated sharply across the globe under President Donald
Trump and an overwhelming majority of people in other countries have no
confidence in his ability to lead, a survey from the Pew Research Center
showed.
Five months into Trump's presidency, the survey spanning 37 nations
showed U.S. favorability ratings in the rest of the world slumping to 49
percent from 64 percent at the end of Barack Obama's eight years in the
White House.
But the falls were far steeper in some of America's closest allies,
including U.S. neighbors Mexico and Canada, and European partners like
Germany and Spain.
Trump took office in January pledging to put "America First". Since then
he has pressed ahead with plans to build a wall along the U.S. border
with Mexico, announced he will pull out of the Paris climate accord, and
accused countries including Canada, Germany and China of unfair trade
practices.
On his first foreign trip as president in early June, Trump received
warm welcomes in Saudi Arabia and Israel, but a cool reception from
European partners, with whom he clashed over NATO spending, climate and
trade.
Just 30 percent of Mexicans now say they have a favorable view of the
United States, down from 66 percent at the end of the Obama era. In
Canada and Germany, favorability ratings slid by 22 points, to 43
percent and 35 percent, respectively.
In many European countries, the ratings were comparable to those seen at
the end of the presidency of George W. Bush, whose 2003 invasion of Iraq
was deeply unpopular.
"The drop in favorability ratings for the United States is widespread,"
the Pew report said. "The share of the public with a positive view of
the U.S. has plummeted in a diverse set of countries from Latin America,
North America, Europe, Asia and Africa".
BELOW PUTIN AND XI
The survey, based on the responses of 40,447 people and conducted
between Feb. 16 and May 8 this year, showed even deeper mistrust of
Trump himself, with only 22 percent of those surveyed saying they had
confidence he would do the right thing in world affairs, compared to 64
percent who trusted Obama.
[to top of second column] |
From L-R, European Council President Donald Tusk, Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, U.S.
President Donald Trump, Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni,
French President Emmanuel Macron, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
react during a family photo during the G7 Summit in Taormina,
Sicily, Italy, May 26, 2017. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer/File Photo
Both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi
Jinping, with confidence ratings of 27 percent and 28 percent
respectively, scored higher than Trump. German Chancellor Angela
Merkel, with a confidence rating of 42 percent, scored highest among
the four leaders in the survey.
The countries with the lowest confidence in Trump were Mexico, at 5
percent and Spain at 7 percent. The only two countries where ratings
improved compared to Obama were Russia, where confidence in the U.S.
president surged to 53 percent from 11 percent, and Israel, where it
rose 7 points to 56 percent.
Globally, 75 percent of respondents described Trump as "arrogant",
65 percent as "intolerant" and 62 percent as "dangerous". A majority
of 55 percent also described him as a "strong leader".
The survey showed widespread disapproval of Trump's signature policy
proposals, with 76 percent unhappy with his plan to build the wall
on the border with Mexico, 72 percent against his withdrawal from
major trade agreements and 62 percent opposed to his plans to
restrict travel to the U.S. from some majority-Muslim countries.
On the positive side, the survey showed that 58 percent of
respondents had a positive view of Americans in general. And in many
regions of the world, a majority or plurality of respondents said
they expected relations with the United States to stay roughly the
same in spite of Trump.
(Reporting by Noah Barkin; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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