82% of Americans Have a Negative View of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and Its Leaders

On September 28th, a new poll by a research center showed that since Xi Jinping took office, the public opinion of the United States on the CCP has been mostly negative, and 82% of Americans have a negative view of the CCP and its leaders, while in 2018 this data was only for that 47%. 67% of respondents also see the CCP’s strength and influence as a growing threat, up 23 percentage points from 2013. The main reasons are:

 The militarization of the South China Sea by the Chinese government.

 The handling of the COVID-19 virus epidemic.

 The trade war during the Trump era.

 The CCP’s human rights abuses.

 Negative views of the CCP are not limited to Americans, with more than 80 percent of respondents in Australia, South Korea, and Japan saying they dislike the CCP regime.

 It is worth mentioning the antipathy is only directed at the Chinese government and its leaders, not at the Chinese. Former Secretary of State Mr. Pompeo launched a new policy under Trump that aims to distinguish between China’s 1.4 billion people and the ruling Chinese Communist regime. The CCP and the United States are inherently antithetical in their values. They fear that the Chinese will be inspired by the liberal democracy of the United States, the most influential country in the idea of democracy and freedom. Mile Guo was the first to say that the CCP is not the same as the Chinese, and the people of the United States and the world have gradually awakened.

 Despite the fact that American financial institutions make a lot of money in China, most banks say that if the CCP invades Taiwan, they will follow the United States and comply with all possible sanctions against the CCP, as they did in Russia.

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Translator: Himalaya OXV
Design&editor: HBamboo(昆仑竹)

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