What the world thinks of Trump, Ukraine and Chinese supremacy
A new poll of 30,000 people worldwide has some surprising results
ON THE EVE of America’s presidential election, many people around the world are waiting on edge. Although non-Americans do not get a vote, the outcome of the election will have ramifications far beyond America’s borders on issues such as international trade, the credibility of Western defence alliances and the rise of China. In order to gauge where public opinion sits, The Economist, working with Globescan, a consulting and polling firm, asked 30,000 people worldwide for their views.
Explore more
Discover more
A surprise new twist in Putin’s currency wars
The BIS ditches a new payments platform the Kremlin wants to mimic
Intrigue, greed and hostility burn in the Antarctic
If you thought its freezing icescapes would escape a world on fire, think again
The Telegram: our new guide to a dangerous world
The old order is dying. Our geopolitics columnist will tell you what’s coming next
Putin’s plan to dethrone the dollar
He hopes this week’s BRICS summit will spark a sanctions-busting big bang
Vladimir Putin’s spies are plotting global chaos
Russia is enacting a revolutionary plan of sabotage, arson and assassination
Over a billion have voted in 2024: has democracy won?
Half the world has had elections so far this year
Discover more
Why half of America will vote for Donald Trump
Let us count the ways
A much-watched poll from Iowa points to a Harris landslide
It is probably a fluke
Why the Trump trade might be flawed
Investors are betting on him boosting the dollar, perhaps mistakenly
How to win Nevada
There is a formula to winning the Silver State. Can Democrats crack it again?
The biggest winner from the Biden administration’s foreign policy has been China, say Michael Waltz and Matthew Kroenig
A Republican congressman and a former Pentagon strategist say the next president must shift America’s focus
Dan Osborn shows some Democratic ideas can outperform the party
A white, working-class independent, he threatens the Republican dominance of Nebraska’s politics