Off the wire
U.S. imposes sanctions on two Syria militant leaders  • UN refugee agency opens new site in Uganda to host refugees from South Sudan  • Morocco, Zambia pledge to strengthen cooperation  • Feature: China in spotlight of Serbia's tourism development plans  • UN stresses need to reinvogorate "bread basket" of South Sudan  • APOEL eliminate Atheltic Bilbao with 2-0 win  • Defense fair ends with 5.26 bln USD deals  • Anti-police violence protest turns violent in Paris, scores arrested  • English champions Leicester City sack manager Ranieri  • UN chief to address UN Human Rights Council opening session in Geneva  
You are here:   Home

Current Americans' view of China most positive in three decades: poll

Xinhua, February 24, 2017 Adjust font size:

Half of Americans now view China favorably, the highest rating since 1989, found a Gallup released Thursday.

This is up from 44 percent in 2016 and 41 percent in 2012, found the Feb. 1-5 Gallup poll.

China's favorable rating by Americans was only 38 in 1985 but registered 72 percent in Gallup's poll in February 1989, taken days after former U.S. President George H. W. Bush returned from a diplomatic visit to China. It had remained at the low 40s for most of the time since 1989, according to Gallup.

The six-percentage-point rise in China's overall favorability from last year is explained by increases among both Democrats and Republicans, Gallup said.

The poll found that 58 percent of Democrats and 53 percent of independents view China favorably. Though only 38 percent of Republicans view China favorably, it is still up by 10 percentage points from 2016.

The U.S.-China relations have never been entirely smooth in the past decades due to tensions over Taiwan, nuclear arms, human rights and other incidents, and the election of Republican candidate Donald Trump as president adds more complexity to the relations, Gallup noted.

Though the future of U.S.-China relations is unclear, "it may be helpful for the new administration to know that Americans are feeling relatively positively toward China right now, and thus may be less receptive to a hard-nosed approach to U.S.-China relations," Gallup said. Endit