Tri-County Vanguard

American reputation in decline

- Jim Vibert

of the president himself.

Whether the Trump presidency is an aberration, or a reflection of the American character will become clearer in 2020, when Americans decide whether to end it or double-down on their dark side. But that it occurred at all forced much of the world to reassess the global order America largely created and certainly perpetuate­d post the Second World War.

As European Parliament member and US-relations delegate Christian Ehler put it: President Trump “is rather a gravedigge­r for the postwar order which the United States itself has founded.”

That former world order had America as the undisputed leader of liberal democracie­s and their related ilk, as those nations generally worked together to advance the welfare of people where ever they could.

Trump’s America is a self-obsessed place that asks only what the rest of the world will do for it.

“Europe should be grateful [to] President Trump, because thanks to him, we have got rid of old illusions. He has made us realize that if you need a helping hand, you will find one at the end of your arm,” European Council President Donald Tusk said, summing up the new internatio­nal reality.

The opinions of their leaders are broadly shared by Europeans in general. Trump’s election resulted in a precipitou­s decline in America’s reputation in Europe, and a recent Pew Research Centre survey shows the sentiment has hardened.

Not only do Europeans no longer view the United States as the global leader it was, but for the first time Pew found a majority in France, Germany, Poland, Spain and the UK don’t believe the U.S. is the land of the free.

This year, on average, only about 40 per cent of citizens surveyed in those nations responded in the affirmativ­e to the question: Do you think the government of the United States respects the personal freedoms of its people?

Just five years ago, 76 per cent of respondent­s in those five nations answered “yes” to that same question.

Meanwhile, back home, a new study from the Angus Reid Institute finds, for the first time in four decades, less than half of Canadians look favourably on their southern neighbour.

The Reid research shows Canadians are almost evenly split, with 49 per cent reporting a favourable opinion of the United States and 47 per cent unfavourab­le. That’s 10 points lower than the previous low-mark – 59 per cent favourable – recorded during the second term of George W. Bush’s presidency.

Canadians hold a number of nations in higher esteem than the United States, including the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Germany, Japan and Mexico.

The unfavourab­le opinion of the U.S. is most pronounced among younger Canadians. The Reid survey found that only 41 per cent of Canadians ages 18 to 34 have a favourable view of America.

While it was Donald Trump’s election, policies and pronouncem­ents that dragged America’s internatio­nal reputation into the gutter, it’s too easy to lay the blame on him and conclude the world order will return to what it was after he’s gone.

Americans elected Trump and in so doing endorsed his protection­ism, isolationi­sm and his selfprocla­imed nationalis­m.

They can change presidents in 2020, but it will take the world much longer to forget the hard lessons about America it learned in 2016.

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