On 3 year anniversary of election, polls have consistently shown most Americans disapprove of Trump

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Tony Stark, Nov 15, 2019.

  1. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    https://www.newsweek.com/three-year...s-say-most-americans-disapprove-trump-1470543

    On three-year anniversary of election, polls have consistently shown most Americans disapprove of Trump

    By Aila Slisco On 11/8/19 at 4:00 AM EST

    Three years after he was elected, opinion poll averages show that a majority of Americans do not approve of President Donald Trump's presidency, and for most of his tenure, a plurality of people have consistently disapproved of his job performance.

    In averages of numerous polls available on RealClearPolitics since his January 2017 inauguration, Trump's job approval rating has remained relatively consistent, but he has clearly failed to win over the majority of Americans. Even polls such as Rasmussen Reports, which seem to be consistently more favorable to the president, do not show a consistently positive swing in favor of Trump.

    A series of scandals including the Mueller investigation on Russian interference in the 2016 election and the recent and ongoing impeachment inquiry do not seem to have significantly changed the opinions of those polled. Americans who approve of the president have largely continued to do so, with an average approval rating rarely dipping below 40 percent and usually remaining a few points above. Those who disapprove of Trump have also remained steadfast, with a consistent disapproval rating exceeding 50 percent on average.

    However, in the average of polls taken one week after Trump was sworn in as president, on January 27, 2017, the numbers were briefly on Trump's side. Respondents who approved of Trump were measured at 44.3 percent, while the number of those who disapproved was 44.2 percent. That .1 percent advantage is the only time Trump's average approval numbers have exceeded his disapproval numbers, and they have not come close since then.

    It should perhaps be noted that a significant boost in popularity is common when new presidents are sworn in. For comparison, in the days after Former President Barack Obama was inaugurated in January 2009, his average approval rating reached 63.5 percent. His numbers dropped significantly after the beginning of his first term, and never managed to reach those heights again.

    When measured against each other overall, Obama's approval ratings largely outperformed Trump, but there have been a few notable if brief periods where Trump had the better numbers.

    When matched against a wider range of former presidents, Trump's poll numbers appear historically weak, according to FiveThirtyEight. When comparing the first 1,022 days of the previous 12 presidents, Trump appears to have the lowest job approval ratings since the dismal numbers seen towards the end of President Jimmy Carter's term.

    His disapproval ratings are significantly higher than past presidents. On average, the percentage of people who disapprove of his presidency appears to be the highest of any president since at least before the tenure of Harry S. Truman.

    National job approval polls will not necessarily reflect the sentiment in key battleground states that the 2020 election is likely to hinge on. In 2016 Trump had nearly 3 million fewer votes than Hillary Clinton nationally, but the Electoral College meant he was elected regardless. In that context, the lack of positive national approval ratings is unlikely to bother Trump or Republicans hoping for Trump's re-election. Even those who hope for Trump's defeat don't seem convinced that his poll numbers indicate trouble for the president in 2020. Polling ahead of the 2016 election did not turn out to be particularly reliable.

    Even if Trump is less than pleased with his average poll numbers, there is a reasonable chance he will not accept them. In the past, the president has made baseless claims that unfavorable polls are "fake news," even declaring that polls by his much-loved media outlet Fox News "suck."
     
    Frederick Foresight and MrKJoe like this.
  2. Overnight

    Overnight

    Fake jobs and unemployment! It is real only when he is president!

    trump jobs b.png trump jobs a.png
     
    Cuddles likes this.
  3. Overnight

    Overnight

    Folks, these are probably the scariest and most eye-opening charts on this guy you will ever see. The extreme narcissism it so rampant here it is disgusting. Frightening, in fact.
     
  4. dozu888

    dozu888

    dude.

    aside from the fact that Obama's recovery was a rebound from the crash, which is a lot easier than Trump's expansion....

    Obama cooked books... put the unemployment chart side by side with the labor participation rate... it went down all thru the obama years, and only stablized after Trump took office.
     
  5. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    Trump on day one of his presidency, instituted an executive order changing how the books are written, amirite?
     
  6. dozu888

    dozu888

    what... stop the cryptics.. just give the facts... I am so busy enjoying my millions, have no time to decipher stuff.. thx.
     
  7. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    Millions? That's poverty hour. You should be honored a billionaire is responding to your ramblings
     
  8. dozu888

    dozu888

    so... for the next 5 years... there are 2 options -

    - you can come over, believe MAGA is real, get in tune with the reality and the market, make yourself rich;

    - or, stay delusional, stay poor, keep having these pity parties like these threads under 'politics'.

    this is a choice that a lot of folks need to make.... on paper it's an easy choice... but in actual practice the ego gets in the way and makes the choice real difficult..
     
    Clubber Lang likes this.
  9. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    You make it sound like some of us were stupid enough to bet against corruption and lobbying results. Still doesn't mean we agree with selling out the country.

    For similar examples, watch "the big short".
     
  10. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark


    More like 15 months
     
    #10     Nov 16, 2019