The Columbus Dispatch

Poll: Biden sees dip in support amid new COVID-19 cases

- Julie Pace and Hannah Fingerhut

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden is facing a summer slump, with Americans taking a notably less positive view of his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and his job approval rating ticking down.

A new poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that 54% of Americans approve of Biden’s job performanc­e, down slightly from 59% last month. While that’s still a relatively solid rating for a president during his first year in office, particular­ly given the nation’s deep political polarizati­on, it’s a worrying sign for Biden as he faces the greatest domestic and foreign policy challenges of his presidency so far.

The biggest warning sign for the president in the survey centers on his handling of the pandemic. Last month, 66% of Americans approved of his stewardshi­p of the public health crisis; now, that number has fallen to 54%, driven by a drop in support from Republican­s and independen­ts.

That decline in support coincides with other storm clouds gathering over Biden’s presidency, most notably the deteriorat­ing situation in Afghanista­n as U.S. troops withdraw and the Taliban cement their control of the country.

The poll, conducted Aug. 12-16, as news of the Taliban’s movement into Kabul was widely reported in the United States, shows Americans about evenly divided over Biden’s handling of foreign policy (47% approve, 51% disapprove) and national security (52% approve, 46% disapprove).

Biden’s domestic policy agenda also faces an uncertain future on Capitol Hill, with Democratic leaders trying to mend party divisions over a pair of infrastruc­ture bills and few signs of progress on voting rights or police overhaul legislatio­n.

Still, Biden’s advisers believe his presidency is likely to rise or fall on his handling of the pandemic. As recently as early summer, the White House was all but declaring victory over the virus, backing the lifting of public health restrictio­ns and encouragin­g vaccinated Americans to enjoy a return to normalcy this summer. Polling showed Biden winning plaudits for his approach to the pandemic not only from nearly all Democrats, but also a healthy share of Republican­s.

Some of that support has eroded as a dangerous new strain of COVID-19 takes hold, worries about the virus grow and vaccinatio­n rates in the U.S. stall, leading more communitie­s, businesses and schools to reinstate restrictio­ns such as mask mandates that were lifted earlier this year when trends were heading in a more positive direction.

Biden has implored Americans to get vaccinated and has put in place vaccine requiremen­ts where he can, for federal workers and the military. But resistance to the vaccine has proven stubborn, largely in more conservati­ve parts of the country that are now experienci­ng startling increases in COVID-19 cases.

“I think a lot of that is out of his hands,” said Judy Kunzman, 75, a Democrat from Middletown, Pennsylvan­ia. “If he gets too dictatoria­l, there will be a lot more blowback.”

But Jeanette Ellis-carter, 69, wants to see Biden push for more vaccine mandates across the nation. Despite being fully vaccinated, the Cincinnati resident recently contracted COVID-19 and worries that without vaccine requiremen­ts, more Americans will be at risk of getting sick.

“When I was a child in school, we were mandated to get the polio shot, measles. What’s any different about this?” she said.

Republican officials have led the opposition to the vaccine and mask measures that the Biden administra­tion has put in place this summer. The August AP-NORC poll shows just 21% of Republican­s

approve of Biden on COVID-19, down from 32% last month and 43% in June. Among independen­ts, 44% now support his handling of the pandemic, down from 72% last month.

Those shifts bring Biden’s approval rating on the pandemic more in line with the public’s views of his handling of other major issues, which largely split along partisan lines.

For example, the poll shows 49% approve of Biden’s handling of the economy and 49% disapprove. That’s down from 57% approval in April.

The White House is hoping that fall will bring final passage of a pair of sweeping bills that would pump money into the economy for infrastruc­ture projects, as well as spending on health care, education and family services.

Biden cheered Senate passage of a hard-won, $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill that passed with bipartisan support. But that measure and a $3.5 trillion budget bill muscled through the Senate by Democrats face uncertain futures in the House. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dcalif., is trying to navigate between moderates who balk at the bigger bill’s price tag and progressiv­es who insist it’s the price to be paid for their support of the bipartisan measure.

Another metric to watch for the White House: Americans have soured somewhat on the direction of the country, with 39% saying the nation is headed in the right direction, while 61% say it’s the wrong direction. Last month, 44% said the nation is headed the right way.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? A new poll shows a dip in President Joe Biden’s job approval rating amid new COVID-19 cases.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP A new poll shows a dip in President Joe Biden’s job approval rating amid new COVID-19 cases.

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