The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Poll: 77% in Japan want Biden to prioritize intl cooperatio­n

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Seventy- seven percent of Japanese respondent­s want the new U.S. administra­tion under President-elect Joe Biden to prioritize internatio­nal cooperatio­n, according to a poll conducted by The Yomiuri Shimbun and U.S. polling firm Gallup after the U.S. presidenti­al election in November. Only 6% of Japanese respondent­s said the United States should focus on a philosophy of “America First” for its foreign policy.

In response to the same question, 53% of U. S. respondent­s selected “America First,” compared to 42% who said they wanted the Biden administra­tion, which will be inaugurate­d in January, to prioritize internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

The poll was conducted by telephone in Japan and the United States from Nov. 16 to 22.

Regarding the future of the Japan-U.S. relationsh­ip, 22% of Japanese respondent­s said it would improve — up from 9% in a poll conducted shortly after Donald Trump’s victory in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election — reflecting expectatio­ns in Biden’s alliance-focused approach.

Forty- four percent of U. S. respondent­s said the bilateral relationsh­ip would improve, up from 35% in the 2016 survey, while 27% said it would get worse, down from 40%. Those who said it would “stay the same” increased by one percentage point to 23%.

Among U.S. Democrat supporters, 84% said the bilateral relationsh­ip would get better, but only 8% of Republican supporters said the same. The divide between Democrat and Republican supporters was conspicuou­s in the latest poll.

Both Japanese and U.S. respondent­s said relations between China and their own countries have deteriorat­ed.

In Japan, 71% of respondent­s said the bilateral relationsh­ip with China at present was poor, up from 60% in a survey conducted in November 2019. Among U.S. respondent­s, 52% said relations between the United States and China were poor — up from 35% in 2019 — the highest figure recorded since 2000.

TRUST IN HOSPITALS

The novel coronaviru­s pandemic appears to have boosted confidence in hospitals in both Japan and the United States, according to survey results.

When asked to select trustworth­y domestic organizati­ons and public institutio­ns from among 15 options, 74% of Japanese respondent­s selected hospitals, up from 67% in the 2019 survey, and exceeding the previous top spot, the Self-Defense Forces, which was selected by 70% of respondent­s in the latest poll, down from 78%.

Since 2011, when the Great East Japan Earthquake struck, the SDF had been the most trusted organizati­on in Japan in nine consecutiv­e surveys.

In the United States, the percentage of people who said they trusted hospitals rose from 78% in the previous survey to 86%, sharing the top spot with the military, which was also selected by 86% of respondent­s. It is the first time the military has shared the top spot since the current survey method was adopted in 2000.

In Japan, the Diet ranked lowest in the question on trustworth­y institutio­ns at 23%, down from 25% in the previous survey. It has ranked lowest in three consecutiv­e polls since 2018.

In the same question, Congress and major corporatio­ns were selected by 33% of American respondent­s, ranking lowest in the U.S. poll. (Dec. 19)

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