Dayton Daily News

World’s view of Trump may offer opening to foe, friend

Gallup poll on U.S. leadership shows broad downturn.

- Peter Baker

WASHINGTON — Much of the world has soured on American leadership since President Donald Trump took office, a loss of faith that has opened up opportunit­ies for other countries like China, Russia and Germany to assert themselves on the internatio­nal stage, according to an extensive new survey of people living around the globe.

Just 30 percent of people interviewe­d in 134 countries last year approved of American leadership under Trump, a drop of nearly 20 percentage points since President Barack Obama’s final year and the lowest finding since the Gallup polling organizati­on began asking the question overseas more than a decade ago. The decline was especially steep in Latin America, Europe and Canada.

The findings of the survey come just a week before Trump plans to go to Europe to attend the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, a traditiona­l gathering of political and economic elites. Trump has alienated many other countries, including longtime U.S. allies, by pulling back from internatio­nal agreements and organizati­ons, not to mention by issuing derogatory remarks like those last week denigratin­g Africa and Haiti.

“It makes it more challengin­g to lead when people are this down on your leadership,” said Jon Clifton, Gallup’s global managing partner. “But on the other hand, if we were sitting with President Trump and his leadership team, they would say these results are understand­able because we’re making tough decisions.”

Among those decisions has been abandoning the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade agreement and the Paris climate change accord, undercutti­ng the multinatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran, assailing NATO allies for not spending more on their militaries and threatenin­g to scrap free-trade pacts with Mexico, Canada, South Korea and others.

The survey showed that approval of U.S. leadership has fallen 10 points or more in 65 of the 134 countries since Trump’s inaugurati­on, while it increased by that much or more in just four countries: Belarus, Israel, Liberia and Macedonia. It fell by 40 percentage points in Canada (from 60 percent in 2016 to 20 percent in 2017) and 28 percentage points in Mexico (from 44 to 16 percent).

Among NATO countries, 18 of 28 had 10-point declines or more, including Italy (14 points), Germany (21 points), Britain (26 points), France (28 points), Belgium (44 points) and Portugal (51 points). Even in Norway, which Trump singled out last week for praise, saying he would rather immigrants come from there than Africa or Haiti, just 13 percent approved of Trump’s leadership, down 42 points from Obama.

On the other hand, Africa was a bright spot for Trump, with 51 percent approving his leadership, just two points lower than the year before. The survey was taken before recent reports of Trump’s disparagin­g remarks about some African nations.

The results are broadly consistent with a Pew Research Center survey taken last year, but Gallup highlighte­d the comparison with other major powers. With 41 percent approval, Germany has replaced the United States as the top-rated global power. China at 30 percent has reached nearly even footing, and Russia is barely trailing with 27 percent.

The survey conflicts with Trump’s oft-stated assertion that the world is respecting the United States more under his leadership. Instead, the Gallup reported concluded, Trump’s foreign policy and his words “have sowed doubt about the U.S. commitment to its partners abroad and called its reliabilit­y into question.”

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 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Approval of American leadership under President Trump has dropped nearly 20 percentage points since President Obama’s final year in office in countries around the world, a Gallup survey found.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Approval of American leadership under President Trump has dropped nearly 20 percentage points since President Obama’s final year in office in countries around the world, a Gallup survey found.

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