The Jerusalem Post

Trump’s coronaviru­s approval sinks to lowest on record

37% were favorable of president’s handling of crisis

- • By CHRIS KAHN

NEW YORK (Reuters) – American approval of US President Donald Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic has dropped to the lowest level on record, the latest Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll shows, as new COVID-19 cases surged and Trump was widely criticized for suggesting he wanted to slow down testing.

The June 22-23 poll also found that a majority of Americans want Trump’s former national security adviser, John Bolton, to testify to Congress under oath, after he accused Trump in a new book of misdeeds, including seeking Chinese President Xi Jinping’s help to win re-election.

The poll shows that 37% of Americans approved of the way Trump has responded to the pandemic, the lowest on record since Reuters/Ipsos started asking the question at the beginning of March. Fifty-eight percent said they disapprove­d.

With a little over four months to go before the November 3 general election, Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al candidate, leads Trump by 10 percentage points among registered voters, according to the latest poll, down slightly from a 13-point lead in a similar poll last week.

Trump has been slow to publicly acknowledg­e the severity of the coronaviru­s outbreak, which has killed more than 120,000 Americans so far, and he has pushed states to reopen before experts said it was safe to do so.

In his first post-pandemic rally, held in Oklahoma on Saturday, the president told thousands of supporters that testing was a “double-edged sword” and that he asked health officials to slow down testing in response to the public’s concern for the growing number of cases.

Administra­tion officials said Tuesday that Trump did not, in fact, ask them to slow down testing, which is one way to track and eventually control the spread of the disease.

Cases have jumped by 25% nationally, according to the latest seven-day tally, led by spikes in a number of states such as Texas, Arizona and Florida that have been more lenient about social distancing.

Trump has steadily bled support among a broad swath of voters since March. Americans are increasing­ly critical of his response to the pandemic and a wave of protests in the aftermath of the May 25 police killing of George Floyd, an African American man, in Minneapoli­s.

Members of Trump’s Republican Party also appeared to be more pessimisti­c than at any other time during his presidency. Just 43% said they thought the country was headed in the “right direction,” the lowest level recorded by the Reuters/Ipsos poll since Trump entered office in January 2017.

Trump has faced an unusual outpouring of criticism from members of the military establishm­ent such as James Mattis, his first defense secretary, over his militarize­d response to the protests. Most recently, Bolton said Trump was unfit to be president and accused him in his new book of routinely obstructin­g justice.

Fifty-eight percent of Americans – 81% of Democrats and 37% of Republican­s – said they would like to see Bolton testify under oath about his experience­s in the Trump administra­tion.

Bolton, who refused to do so last year as part of the House of Representa­tives’ impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump, appeared to confirm one of the investigat­ion’s central allegation­s in his book, saying that Trump wanted Ukraine to investigat­e Biden and his son, Hunter, as a condition to receiving US security aid.

However, Americans appear to be less interested in another protracted impeachmen­t investigat­ion so close to the election. Forty-one percent said they wanted Congress to open another inquiry into Trump, while 39% said they were opposed, and 20% said they were “not sure.”

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online, in English, throughout the United States. It gathered responses from 1,115 adults, including 503 Democrats and 408 Republican­s. It has a credibilit­y interval, a measure of precision, of 3 percentage points.

 ?? (Ash Ponders/Reuters) ?? PROTESTERS JEER at oncoming traffic before a visit by US President Donald Trump to the Dream City Church in Phoenix on Tuesday.
(Ash Ponders/Reuters) PROTESTERS JEER at oncoming traffic before a visit by US President Donald Trump to the Dream City Church in Phoenix on Tuesday.

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