Trump’s classification in the first quarter sits 45 percent: an opinion poll
President Trump’s approval evaluation sits in the first quarter of his second term by 45 percent – an increase in the same time frame in his first term, according to the last Gallup survey.
The polls of polls indicated that Trump described 41 percent of approval during his first administration, which measures 19 percentage points less than post -World War II presidents. The average approval rate of the first quarter of American presidents from 1952 to 2020 is 60 percent.
The latest degree of approval comes as the Americans felt the pressure of Trump’s recent introductory announcement amid the economic uncertainty raised by the market changes and the potential impact of the president’s trade war on consumer prices.
Earlier this month, the commander announced a 10 percent foundation tax on almost all imports and the highest mutual definitions on a group of countries in the hope of creating an American financial boom in the United States, most mutual taxes under a 90-day stop, with the exception of China-a major commercial partner for the United States
However, Republicans appear to be optimistic about the Trump’s economic agenda, as the poll shows.
Less than half of the adults say they trust the president to recommend or do the right thing to the economy, according to Gallup. Nearly 44 percent of Americans shared the lack of confidence in the president’s ability to advance the economy.
11 per cent said that they had no little confidence, and 14 percent said they had a good amount of confidence, and 30 percent said they had a “lot” of faith in his leadership, according to the poll.
The numbers are largely comfortable on the party lines. Less than 90 percent of Republicans said that they have a lot of confidence in Trump’s economic leadership, even with tariffs, compared to 37 percent of independents and 8 percent of Democrats.
Separate opinion polls also highlighted the discontent with the president’s economic policy.
More than half – 51 percent – from Americans surveyed in an economic survey in April that they do not refuse Trump’s job performance while more than half of the Americans, 52 percent, do not agree to his dealings with the economy – which represents 12 percent of his rejection in October 2024 and was measured in the Wall Street magazine.
Trump’s confidence is similar to statistics from his first term. During his first year in office, he obtained a 48 percent approval rating on the economy, according to Gallup.
Although his approval numbers decreased to 44 percent in general since his return to the Oval Office in January, the classification is still similar to its 46 percent average during his first term.
The survey was made from 1 to 14 April between 1,006 adults in the United States, and the margin of error plus or minus 4 degrees Celsius.