Netanyahu ranks among most negatively viewed leaders in 58-country poll
Gallup International End of Year Survey 2025 shows sharp deterioration in global opinion of Israeli prime minister since 2019, with Western allies also turning critical
WASHINGTON (MNTV) ā Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing one of the most severe downturns in global opinion recorded for a major world leader in recent years, according to the Gallup International End of Year Survey 2025.
The survey, conducted by the Gallup International Association across 58 countries and based on responses from 57,864 people, finds that Netanyahuās global standing has deteriorated sharply since 2019.
The End of Year study, first launched in 1977, is among the worldās longest-running cross-national public opinion surveys and tracks attitudes toward leading global figures over time.
Globally, a clear majority of respondents, 61%, hold an unfavorable view of Netanyahu and only 19% of express a favorable opinion.
As many as 20% say they do not know or decline to answer. That translates into a global net favorability score of ā42, placing him deep in negative territory.
Out of the 58 countries surveyed, 53 register a net negative rating for the Israeli leader. Only five countries record a net positive score. In other words, roughly 91% of the countries surveyed tilt negative overall.
The five countries where Netanyahu receives net positive ratings are Azerbaijan, Kenya, India, Ukraine, and Georgia. Azerbaijan posts the strongest positive net score at +24, followed by Kenya at +22 and India at +10.
Ukraine and Georgia record marginally positive scores at +2 each.
In all other countries surveyed, negative views outweigh positive ones. The strongest negative ratings are recorded in Iran, where the net score stands at ā97. Iraq follows at ā81, Bosnia and Herzegovina at ā80, Syria at ā77, and Norway at ā75.
Several Western European countries also show deeply negative results, underscoring how broad the shift in opinion has become.
Regional patterns reinforce the picture of widespread disapproval.
The Arab world records the most negative net score at ā79. Western Europe stands at ā59, while North East Asia also posts ā59. Eastern Europe registers ā37. South East Asia comes in at ā38. Australasia records ā26. Latin America shows ā17. South Asia posts ā11. Africa and North America, represented in the survey by the United States, both stand at ā9.
Western Europe critical
In Western Europe, often regarded as part of Israelās traditional diplomatic and political support base, public opinion appears especially critical.
Germany records a net score of ā66. Spain stands at ā61. Sweden at ā71. Norway at ā75. France at ā42. The United Kingdom at ā26. In several of these countries, the share of respondents holding very unfavorable views alone exceeds 40%.
In the United States, the only North American country included in the survey, Netanyahuās net rating stands at ā9. While this is less negative than much of Europe, it still indicates that unfavorable views outweigh favorable ones.
The data suggest that even in a country long considered Israelās closest ally, opinion is more divided and slightly tilted against him.
Trend data show that this downturn is not a sudden spike but part of a longer erosion. In 2019, the global net favorability score for Netanyahu stood at ā20. By the end of 2025, it had fallen to ā42. Over the same period, unfavorable opinions rose from 41% to 61% globally, while favorable views slipped from 21% to 19%.
The slide is visible in several key European countries. Germanyās net rating has dropped from ā35 in 2017 to ā66 in 2025. Spain has fallen from ā30 to ā61 over the same period. Italy has moved from ā14 in 2017 to ā58 in 2025. Austria has declined from ā31 to ā61. Bosnia and Herzegovina reflects one of the sharpest shifts, plunging from ā20 in 2017 to ā80 in 2025.
These changes suggest a sustained and broad-based decline in sentiment across major European states over nearly a decade.
Demographic analysis indicates that negativity is widespread across age, gender, and socio-economic groups, though it varies in intensity. Men register a net score of ā44, slightly more negative than women at ā41. Older respondents aged 55 and above express the strongest disapproval at ā50, compared with ā36 among those under 34.
Religious affiliation also shapes perceptions. Muslim respondents record a net score of ā56. Christian respondents stand at ā31. Respondents identifying with no religion post ā61, indicating even stronger negativity in that group. High-income economies overall show more negative views, with a net score of ā49, compared with ā31 in lower-income economies.
Employment status and education levels show relatively consistent patterns of disapproval, with no major group registering a positive global average.
Unpopular leader
In comparative terms, Netanyahu ranks among the least favorably viewed leaders included in this yearās survey. With a global net score of ā42, he is seen more negatively than U.S. President Donald Trump, who records ā31. Chinese President Xi Jinping posts ā23. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stands at ā12.
Netanyahuās rating is closely aligned with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who records ā41, placing both leaders at the lower end of global opinion in this wave.
In contrast, Pope Leo stands out as the only leader in the comparison with a clearly positive net rating, at +24, suggesting a sharp divergence between political leaders facing polarized global views and religious leadership attracting broader goodwill.
The findings come at a time when Israelās genocidal war on Gaza has reshaped global discourse around Israel and its leadership. Protests, diplomatic tensions, and debates at international forums have intensified scrutiny of Israelās policies and military actions.
While the survey does not directly attribute causes for shifts in opinion, the timing places the results within a period of heightened global focus on the conflict.
The Gallup International End of Year Survey is carried out annually by a network of more than 65 independent polling organizations operating across continents.
For the 2025 wave, interviews were conducted between October and December in a mix of national and, in a few cases, urban samples. Countries used a combination of telephone interviews, online surveys, and face-to-face fieldwork. Sample sizes varied by country, with most interviewing around 1,000 adults aged 18 and above.
Because the survey series extends back several years, it allows analysts to track not only current attitudes but also long-term trends. In Netanyahuās case, the data point to a marked deterioration in global sentiment since the late 2010s.
Whether these views will shift again as political dynamics change in Israel and the broader Middle East remains to be seen. For now, the numbers suggest that the Israeli prime minister is among the most negatively perceived global leaders measured in one of the worldās most established cross-national opinion studies.