Boston Herald

Poll: Americans OK with N. Korea talks

Uptick in approval of Trump’s handling

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WASHINGTON — Americans appear open to President Trump’s surprise decision to negotiate directly with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and at the same time are less concerned than in recent months by the threat posed by the pariah nation’s nuclear weapons.

That’s according to a new poll from The Associated Press NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, taken after Trump agreed to what would be unpreceden­ted meeting between a U.S. and a North Korean leader.

North Korea has yet to publicly confirm plans for the summit, slated for May, but the poll results suggest its potential has eased fears of war that intensifie­d last year as the North made rapid strides in its nuclear and missile capabiliti­es.

“If you sit down and talk over any matter, there can be a resolution to it without starting a war,” said Sarah Dobbs, a 64-year-old retiree from Norman, Okla., who described herself as a Democrat and is among the 48 percent of Americans who favor Trump’s plan to talk with Kim.

“No other president has ever done something this bold. That’s why I think: Why not let Trump have at it?” she said.

The poll found that 29 percent oppose the plans for talks between the two nations, while 21 percent say they’re neither in favor nor opposed.

The survey also found an uptick in approval of Trump’s handling of relations with North Korea as the focus has shifted from possible U.S. military action to diplomacy. That figure is now 42 percent, up from 34 percent last October amid a coarse back and forth between the two leaders.

Americans are divided over the potential goals of U.S. discussion­s with North Korea. Forty-four percent say the North must completely give up its nukes, the longstandi­ng goal of U.S. policy. Forty percent think the U.S. should consider a deal if the North agrees to make progress toward that goal.

Only 13 percent think the country shouldn’t consider a deal with North Korea at all.

Theresa Ferraro, 71, of Lowell said a summit might make the world safer, but she questioned the president’s temperamen­t for negotiatio­ns.

“He speaks out too much,” she said. “I’m outspoken myself, but you gotta know when to zip it and I don’t think he knows.”

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