The world is side-eyeing the US, a new survey finds
A Pew study across 36 countries shows low confidence in American leadership and a mostly unfavourable view. America's image is running low.
America is still the planet’s biggest power, but the rest of the world is wrinkling its nose. A new Pew Research Center survey across 36 countries finds that, on average, just 23% of adults say they have confidence in President Donald Trump’s leadership — and 57% hold an unfavourable view of the United States.
These are low numbers, and they tell a story bigger than one name: the international image of the US has cooled broadly, from Europe to Asia. Confidence in Washington’s calls on trade, climate and security has slipped among several long-standing allies.
Why it matters here
Portugal is an old Atlantic ally — the Lajes base in the Azores is living proof of that bond. When confidence in the US drops across Europe, the tone of conversations at NATO and the EU shifts — and Portugal is always somewhere at that table. Worth knowing which way the wind is blowing.
Illustrative · Photo: Kampus Production / Pexels