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POLITICS

Germany rated world’s most admired country

Germany has snagged the title of the most admired country in the world for the third year in a row, according to a new Gallup Poll.

Germany rated world's most admired country
Clouds over the Brandenburg Gate on July 24th. Photo: DPA

Germany stood out from other surveyed countries with a government approval rating of 44 percent, 11 percentage points ahead of the US, according to the poll published on Monday

The Bundesrepublik's approval has consistently stayed over 40 percent since 2008, except for in 2018, when it dipped slightly to 39 percent.

The US-based Gallup Poll surveyed 1,000 adults in 134 countries in 2019 – before the coronavirus pandemic had hit the world – on what they think of leadership around the globe. 

READ ALSO: Germany knocks US off its throne and places first in global image ranking

Germany has come in first place every year during the Donald Trump administration.

In the years when Barack Obama was president, the US came in first place as the world’s most admired country, with the exception of 2011, when it barely trailed behind Germany. 

Poll courtesy of Gallup.

Predictable leadership

After Trump became president in 2016, however, the US ratings sunk to an all-time low of 30 percent. 

Gallup’s editor-in-chief, Mohamed Younis said that countries with the strongest, most predictable leadership fare best in the poll.

“Longtime German chancellor Angela Merkel, loved or hated, has been one of the most predictable leaders in highly uncertain times in both Europe and the global order,” he said.

According to a June survey conducted by ZDF 'Politbarometer', both Merkel and her Christian Democratic Party are faring very well.

Their approval is higher than its been in three years, largely due to the government's handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Germany has also ranked high in other global surveys. In 2019, US World News and World Reports ranked it as the fourth best country in the world due to factors such as quality of life, economic strength and innovation. 

READ ALSO: Merkel still ‘most popular politician’ in Germany

Germans unhappy with US leadership

Germans disapproval for the US, on the other hand, stood at an all time high: 78 percent disapproved of the administration in Washington, with only 12 percent approving.

That stood higher than the rest of Europe, which gave the US a disapproval rating of 61 percent, with only a 24 percent approval.

In the survey, China and Russia trailed behind Germany, with approval ratings of 32 percent and 30 percent respectively.

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POLITICS

Scholz urges Germans to ‘go vote’ against attacks on politicians

Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Thursday urged voters to cast their ballots in defence of democracy, as postal voting for June's EU elections began amid a spat of attacks against politicians in Germany.

Scholz urges Germans to 'go vote' against attacks on politicians

“Attacks on our democracy concern us all,” Scholz said in a video podcast Thursday.

“That’s why we can’t stand idly by when our public officials, campaigners or volunteers are brutally attacked. When campaign posters for the European elections are destroyed.

“The answer that each of us can give is very simple — go vote,” he said.

Two politicians from Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD) have been assaulted in the past week.

Matthias Ecke, the head of the SPD’s European election list in the Saxony region, was set upon last Friday by a group of youths as he put up election posters in the eastern city of Dresden.

The four teenage attackers are thought to have links to the far-right group known as “Elblandrevolte”, according to German media.

Former Berlin mayor Franziska Giffey was at a library on Tuesday afternoon when a man came up from behind her and hit her on the head and neck with a bag.

The increased frequency of attacks has sparked calls for tougher action against those who target politicians.

In his podcast, Scholz also took aim at Germany’s far-right AfD party.

Without referring to the party by name, the chancellor hit out at those calling “for Germany to leave the European Union”.

“Our united Europe is too precious to be left to those who want to destroy it.”

The AfD, which wants to dismantle the EU in its current form, is among a crop of far-right parties across Europe expected to make gains at the June polls.

According to opinion polls, the anti-immigration party is set to win around 15 percent of the vote in Germany, tied in second place with the Greens after the conservative CDU-CSU alliance.

The AfD has been hit by several recent scandals in Germany, including allegations of suspicious links with Russia and China.

In the podcast, Scholz blasted those who “see (President Vladimir) Putin’s Russia or (President) Xi Jinping’s China as role models for Europe”.

“What self-destructive madness!,” he said.

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