EuroNews (English)

Europeans hold mainly positive view of EU’s impact on COVID pandemic, exclusive Euronews poll shows

- Lauren Chadwick

Around 40 per cent of Europeans said they held a positive view of the EU’s response to the COVID19 pandemic, according to an exclusive EuronewsIp­sos poll.

But there were large difference­s across EU countries, ranging from 74 per cent in Portugal holding a positive view of the bloc’s impact on fighting the pandemic to a mere 24 per cent holding that view in the Czech Republic.

Respondent­s with the most negative views of the EU’s role during the pandemic were in Romania, Slovakia, and Austria.

Overall, around 32 per cent of Europeans polled said they had neither a positive nor negative view while 28 per cent had a negative view.

The Ipsos poll commission­ed by Euronews was conducted in 18 countries online and by phone between February 23 and March 5, around three months before the June European elections.

It included a total of nearly 26,000 participan­ts who were of voting age.

Respondent­s were asked if they thought that over the years the EU had a positive, negative, or neither positive nor negative impact on the “fight against the COVID-19 epidemic”.

Who was more likely to positively view the EU’s response to COVID?

In Portugal, Finland, Spain, Belgium, and Denmark, more than half of respondent­s held a mostly positive view of the EU’s impact on the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Overall, while there weren’t large difference­s in the views held by men and women, there were difference­s based on age.

Around 47 per cent of respondent­s aged 65 and older held a positive view of the EU’s handling of the pandemic, compared to 41 per cent of those aged 18 to 29 and 36 per cent of those aged 30 to 49.

While people aged 65 and older were more at risk of severe COVID-19, younger individual­s may have been more adversely impacted by individual countries’ restrictio­ns on movement.

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More than half of the respondent­s who intended to vote for parties in the Green, Social Democratic, and pro-EU Renew groups were positive about the bloc’s efforts during COVID-19 as well.

In Greece, Italy, Sweden, Bulgaria, Germany, France, Poland, and the Netherland­s, Europeans surveyed had a more positive than negative view of the EU’s impact on the fight against COVID19.

The EU mobilised a massive €800 billion stimulus package amid the pandemic, partly based on joint borrowing, to help economies bounce back from the crisis.

They also jointly procured vaccines against the virus, securing up to 4.6 billion vaccine doses worth some €71 billion by the end of 2021, according to a report by the European Court of Auditors.

While the vaccine rollout was initially criticised as slower than those in the US and UK, the auditors' report found that the European Commission had “limited leverage to overcome supply challenges”.

The bloc ended up hitting its target of vaccinatin­g 70 per cent of adults against COVID19 in July 2021. Portugal, where respondent­s had the highest positive view of the EU’s impact on the pandemic, notably had the world’s highest vaccinatio­n rate by the end of that year.

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Who was more likely to hold a negative view of the EU’s impact on COVID?

The poll found that Europeans in five countries had a more negative than positive view of the EU’s handling of the pandemic.

But in all countries, the percentage of respondent­s who held a negative view was fewer than half of those surveyed.

Some 42 per cent of respondent­s in Romania saw the EU’s impact as negative, while 41 per cent of people in Slovakia held a negative view as well as 40 per cent of respondent­s in Austria.

Around 38 per cent of people in Hungary held a negative view of the EU’s impact on the fight against COVID-19 while 36 per cent of people in the Czech Republic did.

The Euronews-Ipsos poll also found that those who intend to vote for right-wing populist and euroscepti­c parties in the Identity and Democracy (ID) group in the European Parliament held a more negative view of the EU’s response to the pandemic.

Some 49 per cent of those surveyed who intend to vote for ID parties held a negative view compared to just 22 per cent of those voting for ID parties who hold a positive view of the bloc’s impact on the pandemic.

 ?? ?? European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen takes off her protective face mask as she prepares to deliver a statement at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, July 2021.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen takes off her protective face mask as she prepares to deliver a statement at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, July 2021.

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