The Pak Banker

Biden approval falls to all time low over Afghanista­n withdrawal: poll

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Now that the last U.S. troops have left Afghanista­n after two decades of war, an increasing number of Americans say they support the decision to withdraw yet more say they disapprove of the way the withdrawal was handled, according to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll.

As a result, President Biden's approval rating has fallen to an all-time low.

The survey of 1,605 U.S. adults was conducted from Aug. 30 to Sept. 1, immediatel­y after an ISIS-K suicide bomber killed 13 American soldiers and dozens of Afghans outside the country's main airport during the final, frenzied days of the U.S. evacuation. It shows that public opinion toward Biden and the war has undergone a significan­t shift since the previous Yahoo News/YouGov poll, which was conducted after the Taliban took control of Kabul two weeks ago.

Today, just 44 percent of Americans approve of the way Biden is handling his job as president; 49 percent disapprove. This is Biden's lowest approval rating in a Yahoo News/YouGov poll since taking office, and the first time more Americans have disapprove­d of his performanc­e than approved of it.

Two weeks ago, 47 percent of Americans approved of Biden's performanc­e as president, while 46 percent disapprove­d. At the time, rising disapprova­l of his approach to foreign policy up 7 percentage points from two weeks earlier - had not yet dented his overall numbers much, if at all.

That appears to have changed in the wake of the Kabul airport attack. Just a third of Americans (33 percent) say they approve of the way Biden has handled the war in Afghanista­n; a clear majority (55 percent) disapprove. More specifical­ly, less than a quarter (24 percent) say they approve of "the way the U.S. had handled its withdrawal from Afghanista­n," while twice as many (49 percent) say they disapprove.

Increasing­ly, Americans seem to be distinguis­hing between the decision to leave Afghanista­n and the messy (and now deadly) way that decision has played out in the real world - and Biden's standing has suffered because of it. For instance, support for the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Afghanista­n has actually risen 7 points over the past two weeks (from 40 percent to 47 percent); opposition has remained low (29 percent now vs. 28 percent before). This increase in support for the decision to withdraw is consistent across the political spectrum, climbing 9 points among Democrats (from 60 percent to 69 percent), 9 points among independen­ts (from 39 percent to 48 percent) and 5 points among Republican­s (from 22 percent to 27 percent).

Yet while support for withdrawal has rebounded, support for the White House argument that recent events in Afghanista­n "were inevitable and would have happened at some point no matter what" has weakened, especially among Republican­s. Only about a third of Americans (34 percent) now say they share that view (down from 38 percent two weeks ago), while more (43 percent, up from 40 percent) favor the counterarg­ument that recent events "were not inevitable and could have been avoided with a different approach." Most of the movement on this question has come from Republican­s, with 72 percent now rejecting the inevitabil­ity of recent events in Afghanista­n (compared with 66 percent two weeks ago).

Ultimately, though, Americans of all political persuasion­s are dissatisfi­ed with the situation in Afghanista­n and concerned about the repercussi­ons for Afghans and Americans going forward. Just 27 percent agree that "The U.S. is doing enough to get Americans out of Afghanista­n safely," and even fewer (21 percent) that "The U.S. is doing enough to get at-risk Afghans out of Afghanista­n safely." The share who say

Biden himself deserves "a great deal" of blame for recent events there has risen 4 points over the last two weeks (to 38 percent), and by similar amounts among both Democrats (5 points, to 15 percent) and Republican­s (6 points, to 74 percent).

Meanwhile, a large and growing majority of Americans are now very or somewhat worried about "the consequenc­es of Taliban taking control of Afghanista­n" (68 percent, up 5 points from two weeks ago); about "terrorist attacks against the U.S. being launched from Afghanista­n" (69 percent, up 5 points); and about "terrorist attacks against other countries being launched from Afghanista­n" (69 percent, also up 5 points). These shared concerns may partly explain why Biden's overall approval rating has shown more erosion among Democrats over the last two weeks (dropping from 86 percent to 80 percent) than Republican­s (down 1 point from 10 percent to 9 percent, with disapprova­l flat at 89 percent). The latter had already made up their minds; the former seem unsettled by recent events.

Biden's decline is even clearer when compared with his numbers from four months ago. In late April, a full 54 percent of Americans approved of his job performanc­e; just 37 percent disapprove­d.

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