Trust in U.S. institutions plunges in
Trump's first year
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[January 22, 2018]
By Noah Barkin
DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - Trust in
U.S. institutions, particularly the government, has plunged in President
Donald Trump's first year in office, according to a leading survey
released on the eve of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
The annual Edelman Trust Barometer showed overall trust in the four
institutions it measures - the government, media, business and
non-governmental organizations - falling more steeply in the United
States than in any of the 28 countries surveyed.
Trump has broken with presidential tradition and repeatedly denounced
the media and judiciary - attacks his critics say risk undermining
public confidence in those institutions.
By contrast, the country that saw the biggest trust gains among its own
citizens was China, after a year in which President Xi Jinping cemented
his hold on power at a triumphal party congress.
Faith in the Chinese government jumped 8 points to 84 percent. In the
United States it fell 14 points to 33 percent.
"The United States is enduring an unprecedented crisis of trust," said
Richard Edelman, head of the communications marketing firm that
commissioned the research.
Xi was the headliner in Davos last year, days before Trump was
inaugurated. This year, Trump is the main attraction. He is expected to
defend his "America First" policies in a speech on the final day of the
conference of policymakers, CEOs, bankers and celebrities in the Swiss
Alps, which runs from Jan. 23-26.
Pointing to the steep erosion in trust in the United States, Edelman
said it was the first time since the survey began 18 years ago that such
a precipitous drop was not linked to a specific event, such as an
economic crisis or catastrophe, like the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster
in Japan.
Instead it comes at a time when the U.S. economy is showing robust
growth and stock markets are at record highs.
"Normally when things are going well, trust is pretty good," Edelman
said. "Increasingly there is a disconnect between trust and economic
outcomes."
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President Donald Trump appears on stage at a rally in Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania, U.S. April 29, 2017. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
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He attributed this to a politicisation of the public discourse in the
United States and elsewhere that has left many people confused about
what is fact and what is fiction.
The survey showed nearly 2 in 3 people are unable to distinguish
reliable news from rumors and falsehoods. While trust in journalism
rose to its highest level in years, faith in search engines and
social media platforms like Google, Twitter and Facebook fell in 21
of the 28 countries, making media the least trusted of the four
institutions globally.
The Edelman survey, based on the opinions of over 33,000 people and
conducted between Oct. 28 and Nov. 20 of last year, showed an even
deeper lack of trust in U.S. institutions among the "informed
public" - people who are college educated, earn above-average
incomes and consume news regularly.
Among this group, trust declined a whopping 23 points, putting the
United States in last place among the 28 countries surveyed, below
Russia and South Africa. In 2017 it ranked sixth.
In the broader U.S. population, faith in the government was equally
low among respondents who said they voted for Trump and those who
supported his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election.
But trust in the media was significantly higher among Clinton
backers.
The survey also showed that Americans' trust in their own companies
fell more steeply than in any other country, with Switzerland and
Canada registering the highest levels of trust in their homegrown
brands. It showed a revival of faith in "experts", including
academics and businessmen.
(Reporting by Noah Barkin; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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