The National - News

Trump’s approval ratings make history

- JOYCE KARAM

Donald Trump made history yesterday when a poll put his approval rating at an all-time low for a US president during their first six months in office.

Only 36 per cent of Americans approve of the job Mr Trump is doing, according to a Washington Post and ABC poll conducted last week.

The number is lower than for any previous US president in polls dating back 70 years. Even for Mr Trump himself, it represents a 6 per cent drop in his popularity since April.

Mr Trump attacked the poll on Twitter, saying on the one hand that “almost 40% [approval] is not bad at this time”, before discrediti­ng the poll as “just about the most inaccurate poll around election time!”.

The poll puts Mr Trump’s approval rating at 23 per cent lower than former presidents Barack Obama and George W Bush at this time in their presidency.

Despite Mr Trump’s talk about “great G20” meetings in an interview with the Christian Broadcasti­ng Network on Thursday last week, the poll also showed that 48 per cent of Americans “see the country’s leadership in the world as weaker since Trump was inaugurate­d, compared with 27 per cent who say it is stronger”.

At the heart of Mr Trump’s problems appear to be the accusation­s of Russian involvemen­t in the US presidenti­al elections last year.

One week after The New York Times revealed that Donald Trump Jr met with a Russian lawyer to discuss damaging informatio­n on Hillary Clinton, Americans are growing more suspicious of the Trump campaign’s ties to Moscow.

More than six in 10 (63 per cent) of respondent­s in the poll said Mr Trump Jr’s meeting with the Russian lawyer was inappropri­ate. Sixty per cent also said that Russia tried to influence the presidenti­al election in favour of the Trump campaign, up 4 per cent from a survey conducted in April.

More worrisome for the administra­tion is that about four in 10 believe members of Mr Trump’s campaign intentiona­lly aided Russian efforts to influence the election, though

suspicions have changed little since the spring”, the poll said.

These numbers are also constraini­ng Mr Trump’s ability to reach out to Moscow for policy co-ordination on Syria, Ukraine and a range of other issues. Almost “two in three say they do not trust the president much, including 48 per cent who say they do not trust the president at all” in negotiatio­ns with world leaders, including Vladimir Putin.

The only good news for Mr Trump in the poll is how his opponents, the Democrats, are viewed. Only 37 per cent of Americans “say the Democratic Party currently stands for something, while 52 per cent viewed it as it ‘just stands against Trump’”.

The poll will probably have Republican­s scrambling and worrying about the midterm elections next year in the House of Representa­tives and the Senate. “If Trump’s at 36% approve/58% disapprove, with 32% approval among independen­ts, GOP won’t hold the House,” Bill Kristol, a Republican pundit and editor-at-large of The Weekly Standard conservati­ve news magazine tweeted yesterday.

Already, the Republican Senate leadership has delayed a vote planned for next week on repealing ObamaCare – a key promise of the Trump campaign – after failing to get 50 votes in support of the new bill. According to yesterday’s poll, half of Americans said they prefer ObamaCare over the new Republican plan to replace it, with the plan supported by only 24 per cent of respondent­s.

Neither the investigat­ions into Russian involvemen­t in the presidenti­al election – including by the FBI, US justice department and congressio­nal committees – nor efforts to repeal ObamaCare are expected to conclude soon, and could therefore continue to hamstring Mr Trump’s agenda for some time to come and cut into his approval ratings even further.

 ?? Kevin Lamarque / Reuters ?? Donald Trump’s approval rating has hit a new low.
Kevin Lamarque / Reuters Donald Trump’s approval rating has hit a new low.

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