In Europe, Monarchs Are Far More Popular Than Politicians

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In Europe, Monarchs Are Far More Popular Than Politicians

Key Takeaways

  • Monarchs in Europe have approval ratings nearly 30 points higher than elected leaders.
  • The gap holds in every country analyzed, without exception.
  • Spain shows the widest divide, with almost a 40-point difference.

In Europe, monarchs are far more popular than the politicians who govern.

Data from Morning Consult, visualized by The European Correspondent, shows that monarchs hold an approval advantage of nearly 30 points over national leaders. The gap appears in every country analyzed.

The pattern reveals a clear divide: leaders making policy decisions often face public backlash, while ceremonial figures largely avoid it.

Approval Ratings for Elected and Unelected Leaders

Below, we break down approval ratings across eight European countries.

Name Position Country Approval Rating (April 2026)
King Charles III 👑 Monarch 🇬🇧 UK 53%
Keir Starmer 🗳 National leader 🇬🇧 UK 27%
King Willem-Alexander 👑 Monarch 🇳🇱 Netherlands 63%
Rob Jetten 🗳 National leader 🇳🇱 Netherlands 28%
King Harald V 👑 Monarch 🇳🇴 Norway 61%
Jonas Gahr Støre 🗳 National leader 🇳🇴 Norway 31%
King Philippe 👑 Monarch 🇧🇪 Belgium 66%
Bart de Wever 🗳 National leader 🇧🇪 Belgium 35%
King Carl XVI Gustaf 👑 Monarch 🇸🇪 Sweden 55%
Ulf Kristersson 🗳 National leader 🇸🇪 Sweden 38%
King Felipe VI 👑 Monarch 🇪🇸 Spain 76%
Pedro Sánchez 🗳 National leader 🇪🇸 Spain 38%
King Frederik X 👑 Monarch 🇩🇰 Denmark 80%
Mette Frederiksen 🗳 National leader 🇩🇰 Denmark 43%
Grand Duke Henri 👑 Monarch 🇱🇺 Luxembourg 69%
Luc Frieden 🗳 National leader 🇱🇺 Luxembourg 49%

From the UK to Luxembourg, monarchs outperform politicians across the board. Spain stands out with the largest gap, while even the narrowest differences still favor royalty.

Why Do Monarchs Poll Better?

One key explanation lies in the fundamentally different roles these figures play. Monarchs are typically nonpartisan, symbolic heads of state, largely removed from day-to-day political decision-making. This helps them avoid the scrutiny and backlash that elected leaders inevitably face.

By contrast, national leaders are directly responsible for policy decisions on issues like inflation, immigration, and public services. These decisions often divide public opinion, dragging down approval ratings.

Spain and the Netherlands: The Biggest Gaps

Spain has the widest popularity divide, with King Felipe VI outpacing Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez by nearly 40 points. This reflects broader dissatisfaction with political leadership, alongside relatively stable support for the monarchy.

The Netherlands also shows a notable gap, with King Willem-Alexander maintaining a significant lead despite historically low approval ratings for the monarchy itself. This highlights how unpopular political leadership can become by comparison.

Even Lower-Rated Monarchs Still Lead

Even in countries where monarchs have more modest approval ratings, such as the UK, their standing still surpasses that of elected leaders. This underscores a broader trend: monarchy as an institution retains a degree of public goodwill that politicians struggle to match.

As this data shows, in modern Europe, it’s often the figureheads, not the decision-makers, who win the popularity contest.

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