The push by Trump and Musk to slash the amount of U.S. aid given to foreign countries as part of their “DOGE” project has never been top of mind for voters, but over the past month, it’s fallen even lower down their list of priorities.
Just 29% said cutting foreign aid should be a “top priority” for the Trump administration, down from 35% at the beginning of Trump’s term. There have been notable declines in interest among Democrats and independent voters, but the biggest shift came among Republicans (from 57% in January to 46% now).
Despite these declines in voters’ interest in the matter, the share who see Trump as making foreign aid cuts a top priority has remained relatively level, sans a bit of a bump in mid-March amid news surrounding his administration’s cuts to USAID and the State Department.
The Trump administration doesn’t appear poised to stop. Just this week, The New York Times reported that the “United States is ending its financial support for family planning programs in developing countries, cutting nearly 50 million women off from access to contraception.” It follows the paper’s report last week that the administration was ending funding to an organization “that has helped purchase critical vaccines for children in developing countries “ and would “significantly scale back support for efforts to combat malaria.”
Just this week, “rescue teams from India, Malaysia, Russia, Thailand and other countries have already arrived in Myanmar” in response to a massive earthquake, but a “U.S. team has yet to appear at the scene,” per NBC News.
Domestically, the direct political impact could be minimal in the near term. As my colleagues on our geopolitical team have noted, few voters list prevention of pandemics or global economic crises or protecting human rights should be a top foreign policy priority.
But such actions further paint the picture of a U.S. retreat from the world stage, leaving longer-term implications for the country to grapple with as other actors look to fill in the gaps.
See more on how Americans think about the world in our U.S. Foreign Policy Tracker.