Citizens blame EU and national governments for
slow coronavirus vaccine rollout: Poll
More than half of Germans polled said the EU has
handled the vaccine rollout badly.
Over 50 percent of respondents in Germany are
dissatisfied with the EU's coronavirus vaccine rollout
BY LAURENZ
GEHRKE
March 2,
2021 2:15 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/coronavirus-vaccine-eu-slow-rollout-poll-kekst-cnc/
Citizens in
Germany, France and Sweden are directing blame at Brussels over its handling of
the coronavirus pandemic and vaccine rollouts, according to polling carried out
in mid-February that also points to a drop in support for national governments
and leaders.
With nearly
30 percent of people in the U.K. having received at least one dose, but vaccine
distribution progressing much more slowly across most EU countries, there are
signs that frustration among EU citizens is being directed at politicians
rather than pharma companies.
According
to the survey, which was carried out by Kekst CNC and shared with POLITICO
ahead of publication, 51 percent of German respondents said the European Union
has handled the vaccine rollout badly, a view shared by 35 percent of French
and 24 percent of Swedish respondents.
In the
U.K., 45 percent said the EU has done a bad job, while 77 percent said they
approved of their government's track record on vaccination. By contrast, only
23 percent of Germans, 19 percent of Swedes and 18 percent of French
respondents took a similarly generous view of their respective national vaccine
rollouts.
Despite the
explosive fight between the European Commission and AstraZeneca over the drug
company's inability to fulfill its contract to supply vaccines, pharma
companies seem to have so far received less flak from citizens. In both France
and Germany, net support for the pharmaceutical industry was higher in February
than it was in September, though it dropped significantly from 60 percent
support to 34 percent net support in Sweden in the same period. In the U.K.,
net support rose from 51 percent to 78 percent between September and February.
The survey
also revealed that citizens' discontent is generally reflected in deteriorating
approval ratings of national politicians. German Chancellor Angela Merkel's net
rating, for example, went from +48 percent in June 2020 to +23 percent in
February 2021. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's support dropped from net -7
percent to -13 percent. French President Emmanuel Macron's went from -15
percent to -16 percent. And Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Löfven's net rating
dropped from 7 percent to -17 percent.
There was
also pessimism among respondents about the need for future lockdowns. Only 22
percent of British respondents said they didn't believe that the country will
need another, with 38 percent of Germans, 33 percent of Swedes and 28 percent
of French respondents saying the same.
On travel,
there is a similarly downbeat view, with just 13 percent of British, 26 percent
of French, 27 percent of German and 23 percent of Swedish respondents saying
they expected to be able to book a summer vacation. The low figure among U.K.
citizens may be in part because the polling was carried out ahead of the
government's announcement of its plan to open up the economy and lift most
restrictions in stages by June.
Kekst CNC
polled 1,000 adults per country in Germany, France, Sweden, the U.K., Japan and
the U.S. between February 11 and February 21.
CORRECTION:
This article was changed to correct the figure for Angela Merkel's approval
rating in June 2020.


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