Trump is
unpopular in Europe — even among right-wing populist supporters, POLITICO Poll
shows
The U.S.
president gets favorable views from only about a third of people who support
the parties Trump wants to see win power in France and Germany.
December
29, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Hanne
Cokelaere
https://www.politico.eu/article/politico-poll-international-populism-donald-trump/
U.S.
President Donald Trump wants to grow Europe’s right-wing populist movement but
he might have a harder time than he expects winning over European voters.
The MAGA
leader is unpopular in Europe, even among the supporters of right-wing populist
parties he sees as allies, according to the new POLITICO Poll in partnership
with Public First, which surveyed more than 10,000 people across five countries
earlier this month. His biggest fans are in Britain, where 50 percent of
Reform-aligned respondents had favorable views of Trump. However, in France and
Germany, only about a third of people who said they had supported right-wing
parties reported seeing Trump in a favorable light.
The poll
findings come after the Trump administration rolled out a new national security
strategy aimed at cultivating the “growing influence of patriotic European
parties,” which have drawn increasing support in France, Germany and the U.K.,
though they haven’t yet translated that into electoral wins.
The new
POLITICO Poll data offers a potential warning to right-wing populist parties
trying to attract broader support while also getting closer to Trump, as people
who said they would support such parties in a new vote were more negative about
Trump than those who supported them in the past across the U.K., France and
Germany.
The U.S.
president is even more unpopular across the general population. In France and
Germany, two-thirds of respondents held a negative opinion of him. In the U.K.,
55 percent reported negative views; barely more than in the U.S., where 50
percent said they had negative views. Trump is least popular in Canada, where
72 percent of respondents held a negative opinion.
Supporters
of the “patriotic” right-wing populist parties the U.S. administration
name-checked in its security strategy are far more supportive of the U.S.
president than others but, crucially, not even they delivered a ringing
endorsement.
In
France, voters of the National Rally of French right-wing populist firebrand
Marine Le Pen were broadly appreciative of her. But when it came to the U.S.
president, more voters said they held a negative view (38 percent) than
reported a positive one (30 percent). Alternative for Germany supporters
overwhelmingly approved of party leader Alice Weidel, but were also divided
over Trump, with 34 percent thinking well of him and 33 percent opposed.
The
findings underscore the challenge facing the National Rally, which isn’t just
catering to its past voter base but also trying to win broader backing ahead of
local elections next year and a key presidential election in 2027. The party of
right-wing populist firebrands Le Pen and Jordan Bardella is the third
political force but the largest single party in the National Assembly, and is
currently polling well ahead of other parties.
Its
leaders were quick to dismiss White House efforts to support Europe’s
right-wing forces. Bardella told The Telegraph that he rejected the “vassalage”
of “a big brother like Trump,” and Thierry Mariani, a member of the party’s
national board, told POLITICO that “Trump treats us like a colony — with his
rhetoric, which isn’t a big deal, but especially economically and politically.”
The
exception was Britain, where 79 percent of Reform supporters reported holding
favorable views of their leader Nigel Farage as Trump found a bare majority of
favorable views.
America
First, friends second?
Across
the U.K., France and Germany, right-wing populist supporters stood out because
of their strong demand that political leaders put their own country first.
Fifty
percent of National Rally voters, 47 percent of AfD voters, and 45 percent of
Reform UK voters singled it out as one of the most important attributes in
political leaders.
Right-wing
populist respondents overwhelmingly agreed that this is a quality Trump
possesses over French President Emmanuel Macron (88 percent), German Chancellor
Friedrich Merz (93 percent) and U.K. PM Keir Starmer (91 percent). And a clear
majority said they want their leaders to try and get along with Trump.
Local
right-wing populist movements have a “nationalist instinct” in common,
according to Jules Walkden, research manager at Public First — but that might
ultimately put them on a collision course with Trump’s MAGA movement favoring
U.S. interests.
“Supporters
of Europe’s right-wing parties clearly want to see their leaders put their own
country first, and they may see Trump as a champion of this approach,” Walkden
said. “But once elected, the practical demands of delivering on a ‘country
first’ promise may quickly expose the limits of this alignment.”
The
POLITICO Poll data also suggests that right-wing populist supporters may admire
Trump’s policies, but they don’t trust him.
Right-wing
populist voters in France and Germany were likelier than others to think that
Trump’s policies benefit the U.S. but also likelier to say that they harm other
countries while doing so.
Again,
Reform UK supporters were most open to Trump, with 42.8 percent saying everyone
would benefit from Trump’s policies.
Across
Germany, France and the U.K., right-wing populist supporters were far likelier
to agree that when a country’s interests clash with allies, the country should
come first. They were also more likely to say that domestic industry should be
protected, if need be to the detriment of its global competitiveness. Nearly 67
percent of Reform UK voters, 71 percent of National Rally voters, and 72
percent of AfD voters indicated this in the POLITICO Poll.
In spite
of that, supporters of those parties tended to be more accepting of the tariffs
the Trump administration has put on European industries.
Sixty-five
percent of AfD voters said the tariffs were bad for Germany but just 37 percent
thought Germany should slap tariffs on the U.S. in return — well below the
overall 47 percent of German respondents who favored this. In Britain, just 45
percent of Reform UK voters considered the tariffs a bad thing and just 35
percent said that the country should match U.S. tariffs with its own tariffs on
U.S. imports.
But in a
sign that right-wing populist supporters’ appreciation of Trump would only go
so far, 60 percent of National Rally voters said Trump’s tariffs on imports
from Europe were a bad thing for France’s economy. And while they were less
likely than others in France to say that their government should match those
tariffs, 48 percent still favored retaliation.

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