Trump, approval rating and polls
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The poll found that if both presidents were to run in 2028, Obama would lead the matchup 44 percent to 33 percent.
Less than a third of voters think the country is better off now than it was a year ago, according to a new poll, as affordability concerns dominate.
After Carney made headlines for his Davos speech criticizing "American hegemony," the Canadian prime minister's approval ratings surged
However, polls have historically underestimated support for the Republican.
The New York Times/Siena College poll, released Thursday, showed Trump with an overall approval rating of 40% and a disapproval rating of 56%.
Said Enten, “Donald Trump is actually in slightly worse position right now on the economy than Joe Biden was in his presidency. And of course, Joe Biden, as I said at the top, the economy ate his presidency alive; and right now, it is eating Donald Trump’s presidency alive.”
As Trump rages over “fake” polls after a New York Times survey delivers abysmal findings on immigration, a leading political theorist asks whether popular opposition has any hope of constraining him at all.
Newsweek looked at four polls conducted during or after the death of Alex Pretti.