US military aid to Ukraine may have been curtailed, but support among the American public has proven more resilient, with new data shedding light on the Americans most and least likely to support Ukraine.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. An April survey by Pew Research Center shows that, more than four years into Russia’s full-scale invasion, Ukraine remains a salient foreign policy issue for a majority of Americans – across party lines. While the share of Americans who say the war is personally important to them has declined slightly since 2024 (from 59%), 54% still say it is at least somewhat important. Around 34% say it is not, while 12% remain unsure. Partisan differences persist, but they are not absolute. Democrats (62%) are more likely than Republicans (49%) to say the war matters to them personally. Age, however, appears to be the more decisive factor. Among Democrats, 71% of those aged 50+ say the war is important, compared to 55% of those aged 18-49. The same pattern holds among Republicans: 60% of older Republicans versus just 37% of younger ones. In other words, concern about Ukraine increases significantly with age –regardless of party affiliation. Nonetheless, public concern does not translate neatly into support for policy. Only 29% of Americans say the US is not providing enough support to Ukraine. Meanwhile, 26% believe support is about right, while 20% say it provides too much support. The share of Americans who believe the US is doing too much has stabilized compared to August 2025, but remains lower than in February 2025, when it peaked at 30%.
The Most and Least Likely American Voter to Support Ukraine
Republicans have seen a shift in their attitude not just to Ukraine but to Trump and Russia as well.










