@2003MugishaPhocit
I don't think many national leaderships really support Trump - especially after seeing what just happened to one that did - Orbán in Hungary. Mostly, they're just equivocating - balancing expression of their real feelings with the interests of their own countries' businesses that are invested in the US, fearing Trump's bizarre unpredictability, hoping that he'll soon be gone without them having to actually do anything about it.
That France, and Spain much more so, have been most outspoken against Trump in Europe is interesting, because these have always been amongst the least invested in NATO and other US links; both have big world languages that are not English, and lots of links with South America and Africa.
Sanchez for example has been more explicitly anti-Trump than most, partly because he is a decent socialist - but also partly because Spain has less to lose than, say, Starmer in the UK.
France is moving decisively to Linux now, partly in response to Trump - but on the other hand when I moved to France from the UK 14 years ago, I was delighted to find that my kids' school already mandated .odf rather than the US propriety .doc format. There is a deep background to these national differences.