By Jeffrey M. Jones
Story Highlights
- Approval among Republicans
hits 94%
- Poll shows highest party
polarization on record
- Half of registered voters
say Trump deserves to be
re-elected
February 04, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
WASHINGTON, D.C. --
President Donald Trump's job approval rating has
risen to 49%, his highest in Gallup polling since he
took office in 2017.
The new poll finds 50% of Americans disapproving
of Trump, leaving just 1% expressing no opinion. The
average percentage not having an opinion on Trump
has been 5% throughout his presidency.
Trump's approval rating has risen because of
higher ratings among both Republicans and
independents. His 94% approval rating among
Republicans is up six percentage points from early
January and is three points higher than his previous
best among his fellow partisans. The 42% approval
rating among independents is up five points, and
ties three other polls as his best among that group.
Democratic approval is 7%, down slightly from 10%.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The 87-point gap between Republican and
Democratic approval in the current poll is the
largest Gallup has measured in any Gallup poll to
date,
surpassing the prior record, held by Trump and
Barack Obama, by one point.
The Jan. 16-29 poll was conducted in the midst of
the Senate impeachment trial that will likely result
in the president's acquittal. The poll finds 52% of
Americans in favor of acquitting Trump and 46% in
favor of convicting and removing him from office.
In addition to possibly reflecting sentiment
regarding his impeachment, Trump's increased
approval rating may also result from other issues,
including:
- The recent military action in Iran.
More Americans in the new poll approve (53%)
than disapprove (45%) of the U.S. military
action that resulted in the death of a leading
Iranian military general. Iran retaliated but,
despite fears of escalation, no further military
action has been taken by either side.
- Foreign trade. During the
poll's field period, Trump also signed the
United States-Mexico-Canada trade deal to
replace the North American Free Trade Agreement.
- The economy. Americans'
confidence in the economy is higher than at
any point in the past two decades. Similarly,
national satisfaction is the highest in
nearly 15 years.
Sixty-three percent of Americans now approve of
the way Trump is handling the economy, up six points
from the prior reading in November. It is the
highest economic approval rating not only for Trump,
but for any president since George W. Bush
enjoyed
stratospheric job approval ratings in the first
few months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks.
Trump's ratings for handling foreign affairs
(47%) and foreign trade (50%) are also his best to
date.
Republican Party Image
Also Improving
As Trump's job approval rating has improved, so
has the image of the Republican Party. Now, 51% of
Americans view the Republican Party favorably, up
from 43% in September. It is the first time GOP
favorability has exceeded 50% since 2005.
Meanwhile, 45% of Americans have a positive
opinion of the Democratic Party, a slight dip from
48% in September.
Additionally, the poll finds 48% of Americans
identifying as Republicans or leaning toward that
party, compared with 44% Democratic identification
or leaning. Recent Gallup polls had shown a
fairly even partisan distribution, after the
Democratic Party held advantages for much of 2019.
Gallup observed similar public opinion shifts
when Bill Clinton was impeached.
-
Clinton's approval rating spiked to a personal
high of 73% after the House impeachment
vote, and stayed above his
pre-impeachment readings through his
acquittal by the Senate in early 1999.
- A seven-point average Democratic advantage
in party identification and leaning in two early
December 1998 polls (49% to 42%) swelled to an
average 17 points (53% to 36%) in two late
December polls after the Dec. 19, 1998,
impeachment vote.
- The latest impeachment saga has had a
different effect on party favorable ratings,
however. When Clinton was impeached, favorable
ratings of the Democratic Party were unchanged
(but high, at 57% and 58% in two December
polls), while the GOP's ratings plummeted,
falling from 43% pre-impeachment to an all-time
low of 31% after the House vote to impeach.
Election Context
Impeachment and a strong state of the nation may
have brightened Trump's election prospects, but U.S.
registered voters are evenly divided at 50% as to
whether he deserves re-election. When the question
was last asked, just before the 2018 midterm
elections, 41% of Americans thought Trump deserved a
second term.
With the Democratic nomination campaign fully
underway, 39% of registered voters say they will
vote for Trump regardless of whom the Democratic
Party nominates for president, while nearly the same
percentage (36%) say they will vote against
Trump regardless of whom the Democrats choose.
Twenty-four percent of voters say they are waiting
to see whom the Democrats nominate.
For their part, Democrats continue to prefer a
nominee who can defeat Trump over a candidate closer
to them on the issues. Fifty-six percent of
Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents want
the party to nominate a candidate who has the best
chance of beating Trump, even if the candidate does
not agree with them on the issues they care most
about, while 42% want a nominee who agrees with them
on the issues but does not have the best chance of
beating Trump. The current 14-point margin in favor
of electability is smaller than the
24-point gap measured in November, suggesting
Democrats may have a harder time settling for the
eventual nominee if it's someone they don't agree
with.
Democrats identify Joe Biden (44%) as the
candidate they think has the best chance of beating
Trump, followed by Bernie Sanders at 19% and Michael
Bloomberg at 10%. Meanwhile, Democrats are most
likely to name Sanders (28%) as the candidate who is
closest to them on the issues, followed by Biden
(20%) and Elizabeth Warren (16%).
Implications
Whether the rise in Trump's approval rating and
the Republican Party's image is being driven by a
backlash against impeachment, the strong economy or
other factors may become clearer in the near future.
If it is mostly impeachment-based, his approval
rating may revert quickly back to pre-impeachment
levels, as it did for Clinton. Within two months of
his acquittal in February 1999, Clinton's approval
rating returned to where it was before he was
impeached, as did the Democratic Party's advantage
in party identification and leaning.
If Trump's higher approval rating is being driven
by Americans giving him credit for improvements in
the economy, his support may increase over the
course of the year, as it did for Ronald Reagan in
1984, Clinton in 1996 and Barack Obama in 2012. All
of those recent presidents held office during
periods of sustained economic improvement and were
re-elected with
job approval ratings of better than 50%.
View complete question responses and trends.
Explore President Trump's approval ratings
and compare them with those of past presidents in
the
Gallup Presidential Job Approval Center.
Learn more about public opinion metrics that
matter for the 2020 presidential election at
Gallup's 2020 Presidential Election Center.
This article was
published by "Gallup"
-
Do you agree or disagree? Post
your comment here
==See Also==