Trump
Administration
Trump’s
Approval Rating Has Been Falling Steadily, Polling Average Shows
President
Trump’s approval rating has sunk to about 45 percent, down from 52 percent one
week after he took office.
Tyler
PagerRuth Igielnik
By Tyler
Pager and Ruth Igielnik
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/23/us/politics/trump-approval-rating.html
April 23,
2025
President
Trump’s job approval rating has fallen steadily during his first three months
in office, according to a New York Times average of polling.
Mr. Trump’s
approval rating has sunk to about 45 percent, down from 52 percent one week
after he took office. Around half of the country now disapproves of his
performance, the polling shows.
American
presidents typically enter office with a groundswell of support that wanes over
time. But Mr. Trump’s approval has been dropping slightly faster than his
predecessors.
Mr. Trump
started his term with the second-lowest approval rating for a president in
modern history. The only recent president to have started in a worse position
was Mr. Trump the first time he took office.
The polling
average, assembled by The New York Times, includes nearly all publicly released
polls that track Mr. Trump’s approval rating. The goal of a polling average is
to balance the biases of individual polls, which can vary in quality and
frequency, and to make it easier to track changes in public opinion over time.
The average
does not directly address the causes of the decline in approval, or whether
they are driven by specific actions like his enactment of tariffs, his threats
toward allies or gyrations in the markets.
On average,
across all polls, Mr. Trump’s numbers continued to fall after he issued
sweeping global tariffs by executive order. Though few high-quality polls have
been conducted before and after the tariff announcement, most showed no major
decline after what Mr. Trump called “Liberation Day.”
It is still
too early to fully capture how an event like that has shaped public opinion.
In his
second term, Mr. Trump has sought to reshape the global economy, crack down on
immigration, shrink the federal government and overhaul American law firms and
universities. The blitz is part of a “flood the zone” strategy devised by Mr.
Trump’s aides and allies to overwhelm any opposition.
Mr. Trump is
following through on many of the promises he made as a candidate, but even some
supporters have registered concerns about some of his actions. In particular,
the sweeping tariffs on dozens of countries have rankled allies and
adversaries. The trade war plunged global economic markets into turmoil, before
Mr. Trump paused the tariffs for 90 days, citing talks with other countries
about new trade deals.
Polls show
little drop in his support among Republican voters.
Much of the
decline in approval has come from voters who identify as independent, according
to Quinnipiac University polling. His standing with that crucial voting bloc in
January stood at 41 percent approval and 46 percent disapproval. In
Quinnipiac’s mid-April poll, 58 percent of independents said they disapproved
of the president’s job performance, while just 36 percent approved.
Pollsters
still struggle to fully gauge the strength of Mr. Trump’s support. In 2024,
pre-election polls underestimated Mr. Trump on average by around 3 percentage
points. But even the polls that most accurately assessed his support, such as
AtlasIntel, now show net negative approval ratings.
Mr. Trump
sees his second term as a resounding success. He has bragged about a
significant drop in illegal border crossings, billions of dollars in new
U.S.-based investments, the release of Americans imprisoned abroad and rooting
out diversity initiatives in the public and private sectors.
Mr. Trump
has also promised that new trade deals, including with China, are on the
horizon.
“We’re going
to be making money with everyone, and everyone’s going to be happy,” he told
reporters outside the White House on Wednesday.
Irineo
Cabreros contributed data analysis.
Tyler Pager
is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his
administration.
Ruth
Igielnik is a Times polling editor who conducts polls and analyzes and reports
on the results.
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