European Unity on the Rocks

Presented by the Pew Research Center

Pew Global Atti­tudes Project

The euro crisis has hit the southern European nations surveyed (Greece, Italy and Spain) much harder than the northern (Britain, France and Germany) or eastern coun­tries, (Poland and the Czech Republic). But it is Greece’s repu­tation, more than that of Italy and Spain, that has suffered the most in the eyes of the public. German Chan­cellor Angela Merkel receives the highest marks among leading European offi­cials for her handling of the euro crisis, except in Greece. And Germans are among the most judg­mental of Greece. The Spanish are the most critical of them­selves while the Greeks are the least self-critical.

Germany Favored, Greece Not

Germany is the most respected EU country among those nations surveyed. Roughly eight-in-ten people in France (84%), the Czech Republic (80%) and Poland (78%) hold a favorable view of Germany. The Greeks, however, are harshly critical of Germany. Only 21% have a positive view of Germany, while 78% have an unfa­vorable view. Berlin’s hard line in dealing with the euro crisis may have cost it some support among its fellow EU members. Germany’s favor­a­bility is down 10 points in Spain since 2011, down six points in France and Britain.

France is also held in high regard. Over­whelming majorities in Germany (80%), Poland (76%) and the Czech Republic (74%) express a positive view of France. Only the Greeks (54%) and the Italians (53%) are sparing in their praise. However, in a possible sign of intra-European tension as a result of the euro crisis, positive Italian assessment of France has fallen 20 percentage points since 2007, as has favorable sentiment toward France in the Czech Republic (-11) and Spain (-9).

Strong majorities in seven of the eight coun­tries surveyed have a favorable view of Britain, including 84% in the Czech Republic and 83% in Poland. And these views are largely unchanged from 2007. Only in Greece do people lack enthu­siasm: just 37% of Greeks see Britain in a good light.

Spain is broadly popular. About seven-in-ten or more people in most of the coun­tries surveyed have a favorable opinion of Spain, including 76% in Poland, 74% in Britain and 72% in Greece. The Italians (59%) evidence less enthusiasm.

Despite its recent troubles, roughly two-thirds of Euro­peans surveyed have a positive view of Italy, including 67% of the British, 67% of the French and 66% of the Germans. Only the Spanish, at 58%, are slightly less supportive. But in a sign that Italy’s problems may have affected other Euro­peans’ views of the country, the Polish assessment is down 15 points from 2010, as is the Spanish (-11), the French (-10), and the British rating (-6). Italy fares rela­tively poorly among its own people in opinions of the country: 57% of Italians rate their nation favorably.

Among the major European coun­tries, Greece is clearly the least popular. And its repu­tation is slipping. In no country, other than Greece itself, is there a majority with a favorable view of Greece. Only 25% of the Czech’s have a positive opinion of the Aegean nation. Polish favorable rating of Greece has fallen 28 points since 2010, Spanish ratings of Greece are down 16 points and favor­a­bility of Greece among the British has declined 12 points. Just 27% of Germans see Greece in a positive light and that is down 13 points from 2010. In France, 45% judge Greece favorably, down 20 points from 2010. Contrary to the views of other Euro­peans, 71% of the Greeks have a favorable view of their own country.

Merkel Highly Respected

German Chan­cellor Angela Merkel is widely seen as the most effective national leader in dealing with the European economic crisis. Eight-in-ten Germans say she is doing a good job, as do about three-quarters of the French (76%) and two-thirds of the Czechs (67%), Poles (66%) and British (66%).

In Germany, Merkel is signif­i­cantly more popular among older people than among the young, but in other European nations her appeal cuts across gener­a­tions. Notably, there is no signif­icant gender gap in her appeal. Her efforts are appre­ciated equally by men and women. In most coun­tries, Merkel is popular across ideo­logical lines, including support by 78% of Germans on the left. The French left is not nearly as appre­ciative, a difference that bears watching with a new left-of-center government in Paris. Only 54% of French respon­dents from the left think she is doing a good job with the crisis, 32 points lower than the approval she gets from the French right. Only in Greece (84%) does a majority think Merkel has performed poorly in the crisis. And they are harshly critical: 57% of Greeks say she has done a very bad job.

Recently ousted French pres­ident Nicholas Sarkozy might have fared better running in Germany than in France. While in the run-up to his re-election campaign, 56% of his fellow coun­trymen thought Sarkozy had done a good job dealing with the European economic crisis, 75% of the Germans thought he was handling the crisis well. Sarkozy may have fared less well in other European coun­tries, lacking majority approval of his crisis perfor­mance in Poland (49%), Britain (46%), the Czech Republic (43%) and Italy (36%). But the Greeks are his toughest graders; only 17% say Sarkozy is doing a good job.

British Prime Minister David Cameron comes in for similar crit­icism. Only 16% of Greeks and 28 % of Germans approve of his handling of the European economic crisis. And only 51% of his own people think he is doing a good job. The French see Cameron differ­ently; 59% approve of his perfor­mance. In a number of coun­tries, however, Cameron’s name recog­nition is so low that many respon­dents did not voice an opinion about him.

The leaders of the other European coun­tries surveyed come in for the most crit­icism. In three of the other five coun­tries, a strong majority thinks their own leader is doing a poor job reacting to the European economic troubles. This includes Poland, where 69% crit­icize Prime Minister Donald Tusk; the Czech Republic, where 69% are disdainful of the efforts of Prime Minister Petr Necas; and Greece, where 62% think Prime Minister Lucas Papademos is doing a bad job. In Spain, 50% give Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy bad marks, while 45% approve of how he is handling the crisis. The Italian public is also divided on their leader’s perfor­mance: 44% say Prime Minister Mario Monti is doing a bad job, 48% say a good job.

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Pew Research Center

The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press is an inde­pendent, non-partisan public opinion research orga­ni­zation that studies atti­tudes toward politics, the press and public policy issues. In this role it serves as a valuable infor­mation resource for political leaders, jour­nalists, scholars and citizens.

The Center conducts regular monthly polls on politics and major policy issues as well as the News Interest Index, a weekly survey aimed at gauging the public’s interest in and reaction to major news events. Shorter commen­taries are produced on a regular basis addressing the issues of the day from a public opinion perspective. In addition, the Center peri­od­i­cally fields major surveys on the news media, social issues and inter­na­tional affairs.

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