Trump's approval rating dips to 34%

Here is to hoping the market is on its way back to the 90's :D

DONALD TRUMP'S APPROVAL RATING IS BETTER THAN BILL CLINTON'S AT THIS POINT IN HIS FIRST TERM

BY TIM MARCIN ON 6/6/17 AT 1:38 PM

President Donald Trump is by no means popular—compared with his predecessors, his approval rating has been remarkably low during his time in the White House. But there's some small solace for the president this week: His approval rating is, at least for the moment, a hair better than where President Bill Clinton stood at the same point in his first term.

Different polling outfits put Trump at varying levels of approval, but the RealClearPolitics average had him at 39.8 percent Tuesday, while the weighted average from FiveThirtyEighthad him at exactly 39 percent. Not great numbers, but still better than Clinton. On Day 138 of his presidency, just 37.8 percent of Americans approved of the job he was doing, according to FiveThirtyEight.

If you compare where each president stood at this point in the Gallup tracking poll, however, the two are deadlocked. The most recent Gallup survey pegged Trump's approval at 37 percent, the exact same figure the polling company found for Clinton in early June 1993. Trump's disapproval rating in the survey was far higher, however, outpacing Clinton at 57 percent to 49 percent.

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A number of factors were blamed for Clinton's low approval at the time. The economy wasn't exactly humming along. There were the beginnings of an ethics controversy over the White House travel office. Clinton also allowed gay people to serve in the military under the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that angered people, both for allowing gay people to serve and for not treating gay people equally.

"I never expected that I could take on some of these interests that I've taken on without being attacked," Clinton said about the approval polls at the time. "And whenever you try to change things, there are always people there ready to point out the pain of change without the promise of it, and that's just all part of it. If I worried about the poll ratings, I'd never get anything done here."

Clinton's numbers soon turned around, and by the end of June, Gallup had him in the mid-40s. By the time he left office, 66 percent of the country approved of him.

Trump, meanwhile, has seen his approval rating decline steadily since he moved into the White House. The FBI investigation into his campaign's possible ties to Russia—which, the U.S. intelligence community says, worked to get Trump elected—certainly hasn't helped the president's popularity.

A major event involving that controversy is scheduled for Thursday, when former FBI Directory James Comey—whom Trump fired—is expected to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee. Comey will almost certainly address a conversation with Trump during which the president reportedly urged him to end the investigation into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

Polls, meanwhile, have shown that voters are concerned about the Russia investigation—and how Trump has handled it. Meaning that it seems likely the president could trail Clinton again soon.

http://www.newsweek.com/donald-trumps-approval-rating-better-bill-clintons-first-term-621853

Old news, his ratings have dropped to 34%

And there were no poll averages during Clinton years - just gallup where Donald is way lower than Clinton.

Fake Newsweek
 
Old news, his ratings have dropped to 34%

And there were no poll averages during Clinton years - just gallup where Donald is way lower than Clinton.

Fake Newsweek


Against my better judgement i took you off ignore after i couldnt understand the debate you and jem were having, looks like it was a bad idea, you are a moron.

Newsweek is a left wing rag.
 
So? I don't have any bias when it comes to calling a thing exactly as it is, left-wing/right-wing is your problem, not mine.


LOL, yeah you are the epitome of a well balanced individual, no partisanship whatsoever when even your handle is an attempted slur on the right, i bet you analyze every single news story as a simple well balanced centrist, lol.
 
LOL, yeah you are the epitome of a well balanced individual, no partisanship whatsoever when even your handle is an attempted slur on the right, i bet you analyze every single news story as a simple well balanced centrist, lol.

Yes I am, you are just too far right to not see it. If Sanders or Hillary were in the spotlight, I would have no problems posting factual reporting them on either.

Edit: exGOP is not a slur on the right, it's a slur on what the GOP has become, bunch of anti-intellectual conmen.
 
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Yes I am, you are just too far right to not see it. If Sanders or Hillary were in the spotlight, I would have no problems posting factual reporting them on either.

Edit: exGOP is not a slur on the right, it's a slur on what the GOP has become, bunch of anti-intellectual conmen.


Cool, show us all of your critiques of Obama during his presidency, or was he perfect?

You literally came out of the wood works to spam the forum with far left anti Trump nonsense the second that Trump got elected, can you show us even 1 thread you ever started critiquing Obama? You should have lots of them since you are a well balanced centrist, capable of analysing things with no political lean. Just show us 1, lol. Hell, i bet you cant even find a single "post" you have ever made critiquing obama, but yeah your sitting right in the middle, a well balanced individual. :D
 
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Paul Ryan's view of Trump:


GOP’s New Defense of Trump: The Guy’s A Toddler, He Doesn’t Know Any Better
From taking sides in the Qatar dispute to leaning on an FBI director to drop an investigation, Trump’s blunders should be excused, the argument goes.


WASHINGTON – Republicans attempting to explain President Donald Trump’s behavior appear to be trying out a novel approach: He ought not to be blamed for his mistakes because he doesn’t know any better.

“He’s new at government and so, therefore, I think that he’s learning as he goes,” House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) told reporters Thursday, explaining how Trump could have thought it was OK to lean on the FBI director to drop a criminal investigation.

Call it the toddler defense. Trump cannot be expected to understand appropriate behavior for a president because he is a businessman, not a politician, and is still only learning.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...4b006105480eebd?lt7&ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009
 
Cool, show us all of your critiques of Obama during his presidency, or was he perfect?

You literally came out of the wood works to spam the forum with far left anti Trump nonsense the second that Trump got elected, can you show us even 1 thread you ever started critiquing Obama? You should have lots of them since you are a well balanced centrist, capable of analysing things with no political lean. Just show us 1, lol. Hell, i bet you cant even find a single "post" you have ever made critiquing obama, but yeah your sitting right in the middle, a well balanced individual. :D

You could search my posts and find the Obama critiques, I actually critiqued him by calling him a banking crony puppet just this month even when he is not in office.

And I have been here nearly 5 years and I completely forgot about this place until last month till a search result landed me on the forum again. Trump has been around for a year, I got active a month ago - so you are playing the victim just like Trump because what I post are valid criticisms from variety of non fake news sources.

The reason you can't find anything is because you didn't look for it - you live in your bubble of right wing fake news

Here, just to prove you wrong again
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/nassim-taleb-discusses-trump.309632/#post-4459105
 



A record 60 percent of Americans disapprove of the job President Trump is doing, according to Gallup's daily tracking poll.

That is slightly higher than Trump's previous disapproval threshold, which was 59 percent in late March, according to the poll.

Meanwhile, 36 percent of those surveyed in the latest tracking poll approve of the job Trump is doing, near the record low of 35 percent from March 28.

Neither former President Barack Obama nor President Bill Clinton ever reached 60 percent in the survey, while George W. Bush reached the 60 percent disapproval mark nearly five years into his presidency.
 
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