Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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 ...
By the time Obama was elected as President of the United States on November 4, 2008, Bush's approval rating was in the low to mid 20s and his disapproval grew increasingly significant, being in the high 60s, and even low 70s in some polls. [77] Polls consistently showed that his approval ratings among American voters had averaged around 30 percent.
Reagan had low approval ratings early in his first term, [17] but by 1983 the economy had improved enough to give him a boost for re-election. His challenger was former Vice President Walter Mondale, who advocated a nuclear freeze, the Equal Rights Amendment and a balanced budget.
Obama's approval rating recently hit 56 percent -- his highest level since 2011 -- but that's not the only issue for Donald Trump. Obama's approval rating recently hit 56 percent -- his highest ...
Barack Obama led the pack at 79% in CNN’s first read on his transition approval rating in December 2008, while Biden at 66%, Bush at 65% and Clinton at 62% all received higher approval numbers ...
In a CNN/ORC poll conducted after the convention, 54% of Americans said they approved of Obama's job performance. Obama's approval rating is near its highest point ever -- and that could be a big ...
Barack Obama: 49%: John McCain 46% CBS News [310] May 30–June 3, 2008 Hillary Clinton: 50%: John McCain 41% 930 RV ±4% Barack Obama: 48%: John McCain 42% USA Today/Gallup [311] May 30–June 1, 2008 Hillary Clinton: 48%: John McCain 44% 803 LV ±4% Barack Obama: 49%: John McCain 44% Rasmussen Reports/Pulse Opinion Research (Daily Tracking ...
Trump has sought to frame Obama's tenure as a disaster. But the president's spiking approval ratings and popularity suggest that argument might become lost.