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Average initial approval Average initial disapproval Net initial approval Average final approval Average final disapproval Net final approval Initial to final change 47: Trump (second presidency) 47 41 +6 — — — — 46: Biden 57.5 37.5 +20 37.9 56.9 -19 -39 45: Trump (first presidency) 45 45 0 41.1 56.1 -15 -14 44: Obama 68.5 12.5 +56 59 ...
From March 11 to June 3, 1952, delegates were elected to the 1952 Republican National Convention.. The fight for the 1952 Republican nomination was largely between popular General Dwight D. Eisenhower (who succeeded Thomas E. Dewey as the candidate of the party's liberal eastern establishment) and Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, the longtime leader of the conservative wing.
4 William Howard Taft (1909 ... Timeline of the first Donald Trump presidency. 2017 Q1; ... Joe Biden (2021–2025) Timeline of the Joe Biden presidency. 2021 Q1;
Trump, 78, notched a 54% approval rating, one of his all-time highest, compared to about 46% who disapprove of him, an Emerson College poll found. Biden, 82, scored a 36% approval to 52% ...
Gallup said Trump’s approval ratings among the voting bloc is less than other incoming presidents, as no less than 59 percent of independents have approved of other presidential transitions.
Other presidents have had lower approval ratings than Biden. Here's a look at the claim, and the facts. Fact-check: Does Biden have 'the lowest approval rating of any president ever'?
When the 1952 Republican National Convention opened in Chicago, most political experts rated Taft and Eisenhower as about equal in delegate vote totals. Eisenhower's managers, led by both Dewey and Massachusetts Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., accused Taft of "stealing" delegate votes in Southern states such as Texas and Georgia, and claimed that Taft's leaders in those states had unfairly ...
A year into his term, Joe Biden entered the ranking in the second quartile, at nineteenth place out of 45. Among recent presidents, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama moved up in the rankings, while George W. Bush and Donald Trump moved down, though part of the downward shift was due to the addition of a new president to the poll.