Donald Trump’s popularity has fallen among
Republican voters, poll suggests
Ex-president’s favorability has fallen 9 points to 66%
with party supporters, while Republicans with a negative view rose to 32%
Erum Salam
Tue 25 Jul
2023 18.34 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jul/25/donald-trump-popularity-republican-voters-poll
Donald
Trump’s appeal has sunk among Republicans, a new poll has found.
The former
president, who faces criminal indictments in two cases and possibly a third,
announced earlier this year that he is once again running for president in the
2024 election.
Pew
research found that 63% of Americans of all political affiliations have an
unfavorable opinion of Trump – an increase from 60% last year.
At 66%, the
majority of those who identify as Republicans or Republican-leaning still view
the former president in a favorable light, but that is 9 percentage points
lower than last July’s 75%.
Last July,
about a quarter of those on the right viewed him as very or mostly unfavorably,
but that figure has risen to 32%.
Unsurprisingly,
Democrats’ opinion of Trump is also low, though consistent with recent years.
Ninety-one percent of Democrats polled viewed Trump unfavorably. Of that, 78%
viewed him as very unfavorable.
A mere 8%
of Democrats view him favorably.
By
contrast, Biden’s popularity among the general popularity slipped about 4%
since last year. Positive opinions of Vice-President Kamala Harris were worse,
dropping from 43% to 36% since last year.
Trump still
remains the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, ahead
of the far-right Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, according to FiveThirtyEight.
It is
unclear how Trump’s legal troubles will affect his campaign, if at all. This
year, he was indicted on 37 counts for mishandling classified documents at
Mar-A-Lago in Florida and on 34 felony counts for falsifying business records
in New York. Trial dates in both cases have been set for during the 2024
primary season.
He could
also face the music for his role in inciting the 6 January insurrection at the
Capitol in Washington DC in 2021.
The poll
does not address why Trump fell in the eyes of his own party, but many within
the GOP have not shied away from sharing their distaste for him as their 2024
candidate.
Senator
Lisa Murkowski of Alaska told the Hill in May that she was “certainly” looking
for an alternative to Trump and DeSantis.
“If that is
the face of the Republican party, if that’s the contest, Republicans are
doomed,” she said.
This
article was amended on 25 July 2023 to correct a typo concerning 91% of
Democrats polled

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