Most EU citizens back breaking from US – poll
A majority of residents across the 27 EU member states believe the bloc is too dependent on the US and want it to “go its own way,” a new poll has suggested.
Bertelsmann Stiftung, a Germany-based foundation, polled both Americans and citizens of the 27 EU member states. While some concerns overlap, the survey results suggest the bloc has become more independence-minded following the re-election of Donald Trump.
The poll suggests that 63% of EU citizens wish the bloc would go its own way, compared to just 25% in 2017.
While 51% of polled EU residents believe the US is their most valuable ally, they mostly skew older. Only 38% of the 18-35 cohort backs Washington, while that goes up to 63% among those age 55 and over. Meanwhile, 25% of Americans polled think the bloc is their most valuable ally, while 27% picked the UK.
EU citizens “will have understood that the old America is not coming back,” wrote Isabell Hoffmann and Catherine De Vries, who analyzed the polling data for Bertelsmann. “They cannot hope for the best. They need to prepare for the worst: A United States that is hyper-transactional, sometimes antagonistic, and self-centered.”
While US and EU citizens still see each other as their most valuable ally and hold NATO in high regard, “eight years of American hyper-polarization at home and mixed messaging abroad have taken their toll,” according to Hoffmann and De Vries.
The EU was also divided by country, with only 43% of Belgians considering the US as their top ally compared to 65% of Poles. 13% of Italians picked China as their most important partner.
EU citizens and Americans alike picked secure borders as their top concern, 25% and 35% respectively. A slightly higher percentage in the EU believed that NATO protected them from that threat, 64% compared to 59% in the US.
While 73% of EU citizens would like the bloc to play a more active role in world affairs, only 56% of Americans want the same thing for their own country.
Bertelsmann polled over 26,000 people across all 27 EU member states and a representative sample of 2,500 Americans. The authors placed the margin of error at 0.8% in the EU and 3% in the US, with a confidence level of 95%.