LONDON โ€” The urgent care doctor cocked an eyebrow at Mari Santos and her American accent.

A screenshot of the publication 'The Eagle' featuring an opinion piece by student Mari Santos, a political science student studying at the University of Glasgow in Scotland.

It was four days after President Donald Trump's inauguration, and Santos was a student with a stomach bug in the first weeks of an overseas semester in Glasgow, Scotland. A doctor arrived to see her after a six-hour wait. But before asking what ailed her, he said this: โ€œInteresting time to be an American, I suppose."

Until then, Santos, 20, had not been thinking about Trump โ€” just her 104-degree fever and concern about being sick while abroad. But the president and his triumphant return to the White House, she says, were on her physician's mind, giving the American University student an instant education in geopolitics. The lesson, as she sees it: โ€œThere's a kind of chilling in the air.โ€

โ€œI knew that maybe that Europe is not in general big fan of American politics,โ€ Santos said, โ€œbut I didn't expect it to be such like a personal thing.โ€

The United States and its center of gravity occupy a unique space in the international conversation. People the world over talk about America โ€” its policies, its proclivities, its place in the world. They have for generations. They did it during the Iraq War. They did it during the first Trump administration.

And two months into Trump 2.0, at least in many European and English-speaking countries, it's happening again โ€” sometimes even more intensely.

Answering for America under the new Trump administration is becoming a delicate experience for some of the estimated 5 million U.S. citizens living in other countries.

From Santos in Scotland to others in New Zealand, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and Canada, Republican and Democratic expats alike told The Associated Press in recent weeks that the moment they are revealed to be American changes virtually every conversation to, in essence, โ€œWhat about Trump?โ€

What comes after the revelation that someone is American, U.S. citizens overseas say, are awkward questions, pauses and euphemisms โ€” but almost always a reference to America under Trump in 2025.

โ€œBefore this year, the typical follow-up would be asking where exactly Iโ€™m from and what brought me to France,โ€ said Anthony Mucia, 31, a Nebraska native who lives in Toulouse, France, and has been overseas for six years. โ€œTwice now, the first thing someone asked me was, โ€˜Are you glad to be in France now?โ€™โ€ He also gets looks that he interprets as โ€œa bit of โ€˜shockโ€™ or โ€˜uneasiness.โ€™โ€

What's bending these interactions, expats say, is Trumpโ€™s flurry of orders and statements that have upended 80 years of international order and spooked markets. Trump imposed sweeping tariffs this past week.

Heโ€™s talked about how the U.S. will โ€œone way or the otherโ€ capture Greenland from Denmark, โ€œtake backโ€ Panama and make Canada the 51st U.S. state. He wants to empty and develop war-battered Gaza, and has cut off U.S. aid to the worldโ€™s neediest people. Heโ€™s falsely blamed President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for starting the Russian invasion and ended a White House meeting with Zelenskyy after berating the Ukrainian leader. Trump has let Europeโ€™s leaders know that the U.S. is not a staunch ally in facing the Russian threat. And heโ€™s set off tariff wars with China, Canada and Mexico.

Not smoothing the American experience overseas is the backlash developing against Trumpโ€™s association with Elon Musk and Tesla, which has fueled growing boycott movements. People are joining Facebook groups to exchange ideas about how to avoid U.S. products. Feelings are especially strong across the Nordic region โ€” particularly Denmark, where Trumpโ€™s moves have set โ€œthe Danish Viking blood boiling,โ€ one man told The Associated Press.

So far, the interactions are less hostile than wary, Americans overseas say. But anti-U.S. sentiment is emerging as a concern on the cusp of what's expected to be a record-setting international travel season for Americans.

Jake Lamb, 32, moved from Colorado to Auckland, New Zealand, in 2023. He said he's โ€œnoticed a significant shift in the types and frequency of questions Iโ€™m askedโ€ over the past year. Kiwis remain friendly about it, but they've been saying they might have to โ€œhideโ€ Lamb or vouch that he's โ€œone of the good onesโ€ if Trump escalates conflicts with former allies. He thinks that the good humor belies wariness.

โ€œI am concerned that it may become difficult for some not to hold individual Americans responsible,โ€ Lamb, a volunteer coordinator for a charity and who voted for Democrat Kamala Harris, said in an email.

Elizabeth Van Horne, 33, has lived in France since 2013. For years, she said, people would ask โ€œwhy on Earth I'd come to live in France if I could live in the U.S: 'It's so beautiful, there's so much potential, so much opportunity, like living in a TV show.'โ€

โ€œNow, that romanticized image has completely changed,โ€ Van Horne, a Democrat, said in an email. Early in March, a postal worker told her it's sad to watch.

โ€œFor me,โ€ she said, โ€œthat conversation summed it up: โ€˜Je suis desole pour vousโ€™ โ€” โ€˜Iโ€™m sorry for you.'โ€

Georganne Burke, a Syracuse, N.Y., native living in Ottawa, supported Trump in all three elections and is the chairwoman of Republicans Overseas in Canada. She's a dual citizen, which makes her something like the Peace Bridge that links the two nations in Buffalo, N.Y.

Trump's tariff war, his manner and his provocative talk about how Canada โ€œonly worksโ€ as the 51st U.S. state โ€œhas everybody's hair on fire," she said in an interview. Burke, 77, says she's received threats and had a tense talk with an anti-Trump co-worker. People ask her, โ€œHow could anyone vote for him?"

Greg Swenson of Republicans Overseas UK, poses for a photograph March 20 in London.

Burke's counterpart in London, Greg Swenson of Republicans Overseas UK, says walking around as an American in another country remains more positive than negative. In interviews with media outlets, he readily acknowledges Trump can be โ€œobnoxious.โ€ But Swenson, 62, is an investment banker, and he says the president and America remain good for business.

โ€œIn the private capital world, which is not affected by day-to-day (market) volatility, there is just a huge amount of optimism,โ€ Swenson said.


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