Updated onJun 23, 2023
Updates quarterly

Trans-Atlantic Ties Tracker

Tracking the state of U.S.-Europe relations
Shares of U.S. adults with favorable views of NATO and the European Union minus the corresponding shares with unfavorable views

The trans-Atlantic economic relationship is the largest in the world in terms of transaction value, and among the most complex. Understanding this relationship is key to predicting the trajectory of trade and capital flows, regulation, technological cooperation, and economic statecraft.

The Trans-Atlantic Ties Tracker aims to help multinationals, financial services providers, policymakers and other interested parties better understand the trajectory of public opinion surrounding U.K.-U.S. and E.U.-U.S. relations.It also aids in assessing the implications for the trans-Atlantic economy, including through cross-border trade and capital flows, trans-Atlantic policy and regulatory coordination, and supply chains for consumer goods and critical tech.

Read the latest大西洋两岸关系报告for further in-depth insights.

Key Takeaways

  • Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has strengthened the trans-Atlantic alliance.U.S. favorability toward both the European Union and NATO remains above pre-invasion levels. European views of the United States have recovered fromdownswingsin mid-2022, leaving sentiment in line with pre-invasion levels. Europeans’ views of NATO have continued on a slight upward trajectory.

  • Support for energy sanctions against Russia has weakened.Despite moderating inflation, U.S. voters’ support for sanctions on Russian energy leveled off before dipping to a tracking low in May. In Europe, the United Kingdom saw the biggest drop (9 percentage points) in support for energy sanctions on Russia in light of high energy inflation.

  • U.S. and European adults rank securing energy supplies, protecting the environment and setting standards for consumer products among their top priorities for cooperation.But U.S. adults give export controls and ethical AI standards higher billing than Europeans do, while Europeans are more keen on scientific cooperation.

  • Public concern about semiconductor supply chains has declined, while desire to cooperate on AI ethics has surged.Amid growing public awareness of and interest in generative AI models like ChatGPT, U.S. adults now rank cooperation on artificial intelligence among their top five priorities for trans-Atlantic cooperation. Europeans rank cooperation on the issue lower than U.S. adults (ninth place) as the European Union moves forward with its AI Act in a bid to become the regulatory standard-setter in the field.

European Views of NATO and the United States

Shares of Western Europeans with favorable views of NATO and the United States minus the corresponding shares with unfavorable views
Shares reflect averages of sentiment in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom.

A Country-by-Country Comparison of European Favorability Toward the United States

股票的成年人在每个国家有利的views of the United States minus the corresponding shares with unfavorable views
Data reported is based on eight-month aggregates for all countries shown, with country-specific margins of error of +/-1 percentage point.

U.S. and E.U. Priorities for Cooperation

Respondents were asked to select their top seven priorities from a list of U.S.–E.U. areas of cooperation
Charts report the rank order of shares of respondents identifying each issue as among their top priorities.

U.S. Priorities for Cooperation With the European Union by Party Affiliation

Respondents selected their top seven priorities from a list of U.S.-E.U. areas of cooperation
Charts report the rank order of shares of respondents identifying each issue as among their top priorities.

Issue Spotlight: Sanctions, Trans-Atlantic Trade, Investment and Supply Chains

Shares who say “My government should impose sanctions on exports of Russian oil and natural gas even if it causes the price of goods to rise in my country”

European Support for Energy Sanctions on Russia

Shares who say “My government should impose sanctions on exports of Russian oil and natural gas even if it causes the price of goods to rise in my country”

U.S. Support for Inbound Investment Screening, Outbound Export and Investment Controls

Share of U.S. adults who say they would support or oppose each of the following measures to help secure critical technologies:

Willingness to Pay More for Reshoring and Friend-Shoring

Share of U.S. adults who say they would be willing to pay more for either friend-shored or reshored goods

How Much More U.S. Adults Would Pay for Reshoring and Friend-Shoring

How Much More U.S. Adults Would Pay for Reshoring and Friend-Shoring

Source of This Data

Methodology

The Trans-Atlantic Ties Tracker relies on data collected through Morning Consult’s proprietary survey research capabilities. Interviews are conducted online.

All U.S. data aside from the country favorability series derives from monthly surveys conducted among representative samples of roughly 2,200 U.S. adults or 2,000 registered voters each, with unweighted margins of error of +/-2 percentage points. Data are weighted to approximate representative samples of U.S. voters or adults. U.S. country favorability data comes from Morning Consult Political Intelligence. Country favorability data is based on pooled five-day moving averages of U.S. adults and has an unweighted margin of error of +/-2 percentage points.

All European data aside from the country favorability series derives from surveys conducted among representative samples of roughly 1,000 adults per country, with unweighted margins of error of +/-3 percentage points each. Data are weighted to approximate representative samples of adults in each country. European country favorability data comes from Morning Consult Political Intelligence. Daily reports are based on pooled five-day moving averages of adults in France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom, each with an unweighted margin of error of less than +/-1 percentage point. The favorability map for Europe reports six-month aggregates with sample sizes ranging from roughly 6,400 to 48,000 adults per country, with unweighted margins of error of less than +/-1 percentage point each.

Morning Consult updated its weights for all countries featured in this tracker on Jan. 1, 2023. Dates indicated in all line charts correspond to the last day of survey fielding for each wave.

About Morning Consult

Morning Consult is a global decision intelligence company changing how modern leaders make smarter, faster, better decisions. The company pairs its proprietary high-frequency data with applied artificial intelligence to better inform decisions on what people think and how they will act. Learn more atwww.wikihoaleaks.com.

Email[email protected]to speak with a member of the Morning Consult team.

Sonnet Frisbie
Lead Analyst, EMEA

Sonnet Frisbie leads Morning Consult’s geopolitical risk offering for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Prior to joining Morning Consult, Sonnet spent over a decade at the U.S. State Department specializing in issues at the intersection of economics, commerce and political risk in Iraq, Central Europe and sub-Saharan Africa. She holds an MPP from the University of Chicago.

Follow her on Twitter@sonnetfrisbie. Interested in connecting with Sonnet to discuss her analysis or for a media engagement or speaking opportunity? Email[email protected].