Most US voters don't want Trump to run in 2024 and 42% say he is 'one of the worst presidents' ever, Fox News poll finds https://www.businessinsider.com/42-trump-one-of-worst-presidents-ever-new-poll-finds-2020-12 42% of voters think Trump will be viewed as one of the worst presidents ever, according to a newFox News poll. The majority of voters hold an unfavorable view of Trump and disapprove of how he has handled major political issues during his presidency. There are major partisan divides surrounding questions of the legitimacy of the 2020 Election. The majority of voters don't want Trump to run again in 2024. (More at above url)
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...siena-presidential-ranking-survey/2857075002/ Survey of scholars places Trump as third worst president of all time William Cummings, USA TODAY Published 10:18 a.m. ET Feb. 13, 2019 | Updated 10:55 a.m. ET Feb. 13, 2019 WASHINGTON – Do not expect President Donald Trump to tweet any praises for the Siena College Research Institute any time soon. In its sixth presidential ranking since 1982, 157 scholars surveyed by the institute ranked Trump the third worst president of all time after Andrew Johnson (who was impeached) and James Buchanan (whose presidency was followed by the Civil War). https://www.ibtimes.com/trump-worst-president-us-history-political-scientists-claim-2765338 Trump Is Worst President In US History, Political Scientists Claim By Arthur Villasanta 02/18/19 AT 8:20 PM Donald Trump is rated the worst president in American history by a group of 170 political science scholars. Being ranked 44th and last among U.S. presidents classified Trump as a failure, according to the survey’s parameters. On the other hand, this group selected Abraham Lincoln as the best among all presidents in the history of the American Republic since 1776. Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, took eighth place, and was also the highest ranked among the five living presidents. Obama was in 18th place during the last survey four years ago. Among the three other living presidents, Bill Clinton ranked 13th, Jimmy Carter, 26th and George W. Bush, 30th. The ranking of presidents by order of greatness was determined by members of the Presidents & Executive Politics section of the American Political Science Association. These scholars completed an online survey between December 2017 and January 2018.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/12/politics/trump-president-rankings/index.html Historians will likely rank Trump as one of the worst presidents Analysis by Harry Enten, CNN (CNN) Poll of the week: A new Gallup poll puts President Donald Trump's approval rating at 38%. His disapproval rating stands at 57%. The average poll similarly shows Trump's approval rating hovering around 40%, while his disapproval rating is above 55%. What's the point: Trump's approval rating isn't getting any better. In the polls, he is continuing to lose to former Vice President Joe Biden by double-digits. Trump could win a second term, but there is no clear path to doing so. If Trump does go on to lose in November, he doesn't just need to worry about losing to Biden. Trump needs to worry about the fact that the history books are probably going to put him down as a below average president, if not one of the worst. While I have my problems with historical rankings of presidents as an exercise (e.g. the graders tend to be far more liberal than the population at large), they are a good guide into understanding how history remembers presidents. The presidents viewed at the top of the lists (George Washington and Abraham Lincoln historically) or near the top (Ronald Reagan) tend to be thought of fondly. Meanwhile, those at or near the bottom of the list (such as James Buchanan and Andrew Johnson) are generally thought of as failures as president. The biggest factor separating those who rate highly and those who don't is whether they win a second term in office. Take a look at an average ranking by experts in the 2018 American Political Science Association poll and 2018 Siena College poll. The average ranking for presidents who win a second term is 14th. That's well above average given we've had 44 presidents. None ranked lower than 32nd (George W. Bush). The best was the top spot overall (Washington). The average for presidents who did not win a second term is 30th. That's well below average. None of the presidents who didn't have a second term ranked higher than 13th (John Kennedy, who was assassinated). The worst was last overall (Buchanan). Just on this basis alone, you'd think that Trump would probably go down as below average if he lost in November. We wouldn't know quite where he'd land, but it'd be a pretty good bet that he wouldn't finish in the top half. I'd bet Trump would dip even lower given where the historians already have him. The average of the APSA and Siena polls put Trump at 43rd, which ties him for last with Buchanan. At the time the APSA poll was published, I urged caution since it was one poll done early in Trump's presidency. Now, we have the Siena poll as well. Additionally, more voters by far said Trump was the worst president since World War II in a 2018 Quinnipiac University poll. (Few ranked him as the best, which is very different from a similar poll taken during Obama's second term.) Importantly, these early rankings are generally predictive of later rankings in a look back at presidents since Franklin Roosevelt (the first modern presidential ranking was completed three years after he last held office). Since 1948, the final historian rankings of a president during their time in office (or the first after they leave office) has differed from their current ranking by just four spots. The median difference has been a mere two spots. The presidents who tend to improve the most (such as Dwight Eisenhower) are ones who get that second term. Now, there is obviously some chance Trump could be ranked higher than at the end of 2018. I tend to doubt it, though, because his standing among the public is not any better now than it was then. All told, historians at the end of his first term are likely going to view Trump quite negatively. His only real chance of seeing improvement is to earn that second term, which seems to be something that is becoming less likely by the day.
Being a one term reelection loser already makes him one of the worst.No president who lost re election is considered great.
They conducted a survey of 1,500 people, 500 Republicans, 500 Democrats and 500 Independents on who was the best and worst US President. Ronald Reagan was judged the best US President and Bill Clinton 2nd. Among the worst of the lot was Barack Obama, Jimmy Carter and GW Bush. Everyone was in agreement of that. President Donald Trump was not included as he has not run for office yet, during that time. President Donald Trump is the best US President ever with all his accomplishments in 4 short years, not even counting two traitorous attempted coups by the Democrats with their bogus impeachment attempts, non-stop 24/7 lies by extreme liberal media and numerous, frivolous lawsuits by Democrat state Attorney Generals just to harass President Donald Trump and needlessly, waste tax dollars in the process. If it was a Democrat in his place, they would have long quit. That is not even counting the massive election fraud committed to forcibly, remove him from power on November 3, 2020.
Smallfill you are a fucking idiot Obama ranked 12th best president by historians in new C-SPAN poll Josh Hafner , USA TODAY Published 10:26 a.m. ET Feb. 20, 2017 Just weeks after leaving the White House, President Barack Obama ranks as the 12th best U.S. president overall in a new poll of historians conducted by C-SPAN ahead of Presidents Day. It's the first time Obama was eligible for the Presidential Historians Survey, which asked 91 historians to rank all 43 former presidents across 10 categories. Those include "Pursued Equal Justice for All," in which Obama ranked 3rd, and "Relations with Congress," in which he ranked 39th. Abraham Lincoln retained his top spot for the third time in the poll, which debuted in 2000 and last took place in 2009. Other consistently high-ranking presidents include George Washington, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt, all of whom made the top five overall in each survey. Also notable: George W. Bush bumped up three spots to 33rd since the poll's 2009 edition, while Bill Clinton stayed steady at 15th. The biggest loser since the 2009 survey is Andrew Jackson, the populist president whose portrait adorns the wall of President Donald Trump's Oval Office. Jackson dropped five spots, from 13th to 18th. When asked which president has done the best job in their lifetimes, more Americans name Barack Obama than any other president. More than four-in-ten (44%) say Obama is the best or second best president of their lifetimes, compared with about a third who mention Bill Clinton (33%) or Ronald Reagan (32%).