Houston Chronicle

Biden’s approval rating dips after string of recent setbacks

- By Josh Boak and Emily Swanson

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s popularity has slumped after a slew of challenges in recent weeks at home and abroad for the leader who pledged to bring the country together and restore competence in government, according to a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Fifty percent now say they approve of Biden, while 49 percent disapprove. Fifty-four percent approved in August, and 59 percent did in July. The results come as Americans process the harried and deadly evacuation from Afghanista­n, mounted border patrol agents charging at Haitian refugees, the unshakable threat of the coronaviru­s with its delta variant and the legislativ­e drama of Biden trying to negotiate his economic, infrastruc­ture and tax policies through Congress.

Since July, Biden’s approval rating has dipped among Democrats (from 92 percent to 85 percent) and among independen­ts who don’t lean toward either party (from 62 percent to 38 percent). Just 11 percent of Republican­s approve of the president, which is similar to July.

Approval also dipped somewhat among both white Americans (49 percent to 42 percent) and Black Americans (86 percent to 64 percent).

In follow-up interviews, some of those who had mixed feelings about Biden’s performanc­e still saw him as preferable to former President Donald Trump. They said that Biden was dealing with a pandemic that began under the former president, an Afghanista­n withdrawal negotiated on Trump’s behalf and an economy that tilted in favor of corporatio­ns and the wealthy because of Trump’s tax cuts.

“Trump had a lot to do with what’s going on now,” said Acarla Strickland, 41, a health care worker from Atlanta who voted for Biden yet now feels lukewarm about him.

Just 34 percent of Americans say the country is headed in the right direction, down from about half who said that through the first months of Biden’s presidency. Trump supporters such as Larry Schuth of Hilton, N.Y., feel as though Biden is damaging the nation by seeking to enlarge government and mismanagin­g the southern border.

“If he had a plan to destroy this country and divide this country, I don’t know how you could carry it out any better,” said Schuth, 81. “We’re spending way too much money. We’re planning on spending even more. We don’t have a southern border.”

The poll shows that 47 percent of Americans approve of how Biden is handling the economy, down from a high of 60 percent in March but similar to where it stood in August.

The initial burst of optimism from Biden’s rescue package has been met with the hard realities of employers struggling to find workers and higher-than-expected inflation as supply chain issues have made it harder to find automobile­s, household appliances and other goods.

The poll finds 57 percent approve of Biden’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic. That number is similar to August but remains significan­tly below where it stood as recently as July, when 66 percent approved. Still, it remains Biden’s strongest issue in the poll.

Biden struggles on several issues related to foreign policy. Forty-three percent say they approve of his handling of foreign policy overall, and only 34 percent approve of his handling of the situation in Afghanista­n.

At the same time, Americans are slightly more likely to approve than disapprove of the decision to remove the last remaining U.S. troops from Afghanista­n at the end of August, with 45 percent saying they approve of that decision and 39 percent saying they disapprove.

Just 35 percent of Americans approve of Biden’s handling of immigratio­n, down from 43 percent in April, when it was already one of Biden’s worst issues.

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