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Donald Trump's approval rate becomes negative with a republican storm

According to a survey of a Republican striker, President Donald Trump's approval rate has become a negative area.

The latest survey by RMG Research/Napolitan News, which was carried out between 3,000 registered voters between May 14, shows Trump's approval rate of 48 percent, while 50 percent disapproved. The survey had an error rate of +/- 1.8 percentage points. This has decreased from an approval rate of 52 percent and a rejection of 48 percent in early May.

Everyone, except for an RMG research survey, has shown Trump's approval rate over water since the beginning of his second term, which varies between 55 and 49 percent.

The only survey that Trump shows with a negative net approval rate was a survey of mid-April, which was created just a few weeks after his tariff “liberation day”. The step triggered a temporary Dow Jones crash and delighted the fears of increasing inflation and an upcoming recession, which led to his admission figures decreasing across the board. According to this survey, 48 percent of Trump's performance agreed, although 51 percent disapproved.

In other surveys between back then and early May, his approval and disapproval ratings fluctuated between 48 and 49 percent, which indicates that Trump's approval rate is stabilized again.

Why is it important

The recent surveys had shown that Trump's approval rate after a time of the back of his tariffs “Liberation Day” in April, in which the stock market had fallen back, occurred.

However, surveys published in the past few days show a more complicated picture of Trump's support.

President Donald Trump is silent to silence his cell phone, which rang twice when he spoke to reporters after having instructions regarding nuclear energy in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington …


Evan Vucci/AP

What to know?

Most of the surveys published in the past few days have shown Trump's net approval ratings deep under water, but they paint a mixed picture.

Some surveys have shown that his approval reviews are attracted in the past few days. That includes Newsweeks Tracker, which shows that Trump's approval rate is currently 46 percent, while 51 percent disapprov the president. At the beginning of this month, his approval rate was 44 percent, while his disapproval rate was fixed in the 1950s.

The latest insider advantage survey, which was carried out between 1,000 and probably between 1,000 probable voters, gave Trump a net permission of +11 points, with 55 percent disapproving and 44 percent. This increased from a net approval rating of +2 points at the beginning of May, as 46 percent approved and 44 percent disapproved.

The most recent survey on the morning consultation also showed an increase in Trump's approval rating, approved by 48 percent and 50 percent, which made it possible for the president to have -2 -points a net approval rating, his highest approval rate since mid -March. This is compared to -7 at the beginning of May, when he had an approval rating of 45 percent and disapproved of 52 percent.

The most recent survey JL Partners/Daily Mail, which was carried out between 1 and 14 May between 1,003 voters registered, laid Trump's approval rating at 50 percent to 5 points compared to 45 percent in April.

Opinion poll Date To permit Disapprove
Quantus May 18 to May 20 48 48
Civiqs 17th to May 20th 47 52
American research group 17th to May 20th 41 55
Insider advantage 17th to May 19th 55 44
Morning consultation 16 to May 19th 48 50
YouGov/economist 16 to May 19th 43 51
Reuters/Ipsos 16. to May 18th 42 52
Navigator research 15th to May 18th 44 54
RMG research 14th to May 21st 48 50
Gallup 1st to May 18th 43 53

The overarching trend in the surveys is a stability, whereby some show that his reviews have not changed significantly, which have been pulled beyond the error rate beyond a 1 or 2 point dip or have not changed at all.

This includes the latest survey by Navigator Research, which was carried out between May 15 between 1,376 voters registered, which resulted in Trump's approval rate to 44 percent. This is unchanged from April.

Similarly, Trump's recent survey was the latest survey, which was carried out between May 18 and 20, at 48 percent, during 48 percent. This is unchanged compared to a survey in May in May, and a survey in April also showed that his approval rate was 48 percent, while his disapproval rating was 50 percent higher.

Marquette's most recent survey also showed that his approval rate was unchanged from March, while a survey by the American Research Group between 17 and 20 March under 1,100 Adult Trump's approval rate ran to only 2 points compared to 43 percent in April. Its disapproval rose from 53 percent to 55 percent.

A Youwayov/Economist survey carried out by 43 percent of 42 percent of the previous week has increased a survey by YouGov/Economist from May 16 to 19, while the disapproval of 52 percent slightly fell back to 51 percent. The same pattern occurred in the most recent survey by Civiqs, which was carried out between 17 and 20 in May 20 under 1,018 voters.

And in Gallup's most recent survey, which was carried out between May 1 and May 18, under 1,003 adults, Trump's approval rate sank by 1 point to 43 percent, while his disapproval evaluation has remained unchanged at 53 percent since April.

Thomas Gift, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for Us Policy at the University of College London, told Newsweek That the stability in Trump's election figures is “a symbol for a deeply polarized electorate”.

“Over time, his support floor has proven to be incredibly durable, even in terms of large, large controversy and flattering media reporting,” he added.

How Trump's approval rate is comparable compared to the first term

The RealClearpolitics tracker shows that Trump was 40 percent on May 24, 2017, while his disapproval assessment was 54 percent. This gave him a net permission assessment of -14 points, which Trump now made more popular than at the same point in his first assignment in the Oval Office.

How Trump's approval rate is compared to bidens

Trump's 46 percent approval rate is lower than that of former President Joe Biden at the same point in his presidency. On May 24, 2021, Biden was 54 percent, 42 percent, 42 percent, 42 percent.

While Trump started his second term with his highest approval rate, according to Gallup's first survey of Trump's second term between 21 and 27 January, he was still less popular than any other president since 1953 at the beginning of an term and the only one that started with an approval rate of less than 50 percent. Gallup said Biden launched his first term with an approval of 57 percent.

According to data, which was compiled by the American PresidentCy Project from Gallup, Trump is far below the other recently elected presidents after 100 days and comes from Dwight Eisenhower, who had an approval rate of 73 percent.

Other recent presidents with higher approval ratings on the 100-day mark are John F. Kennedy, 83 percent; Richard Nixon, 62 percent; Jimmy Carter, 63 percent; Ronald Reagan, 68 percent; George HW Bush, 56 percent; Bill Clinton, 55 percent; George W. Bush, 62 percent; And Barack Obama, 65 percent.

What happens next

Trump's approval rate could fluctuate in the coming weeks depending on the result of key events, including critical negotiations in the Russia-Ukraine War, the developing tariff situation and concerns about recession.

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