Just 12 per cent of Americans are proud of their country, 87 per cent are dissatisfied - and a majority say Donald Trump is a 'poor' or 'terrible' president
A new Pew Research Poll released on Wednesday has bad news for Donald Trump - a majority of Americans are dissatisfied with how the country is being run and think that he is a 'poor' or 'terrible' president.
The poll was conducted June 16-22 as coronavirus cases spiked in several states that began the reopening process and the economy is still recovering from the hit it took during the pandemic. Additionally, racial tensions remain on the rise amid demonstrations against about police violence and support for the Black Live Matters movement.
The Pew poll found that the number of Americans satisfied with how the country is going has dropped 19 points, from 31 per cent in April to a mere 12 per cent in June. And 87 per cent are dissatisfied, the 4,708 adults, including 3,577 registered voters, said in the survey. Also only 46 per cent feel hopeful about American while 53 per cent do not.
The Pew poll was one of three polls out Wednesday - and among a spat of recent polls - that show Americans are deeply unhappy with the state of the nation.
A new Pew Research Poll released on Wednesday has bad news for Donald Trump - a majority of Americans are dissatisfied with how the country is being run and think that he is a 'poor' or 'terrible' president
The Pew poll also follows others in its findings that, if the election were held today, Joe Biden would win, with 54 per cent supporting the presumptive Democratic nominee to the 44 per cent saying they will vote for President Trump.
Biden leads by 9.5 points in the RealClearPolitics polling average on the November contest.
Trump, who brags about his high approval rating among Republican Party members, does not get high marks for his job performance in the White House in the Pew poll.
In it, 42 per cent call him a 'terrible' president with 11 per cent describing him as 'poor.' Only 37 per cent call him a good or great commander in chief.
Fewer voters - 28 per cent - say Biden would be a good or great president. But only 28 per cent say he would be terrible while 15 per cent think he would do a poor job.
While President Trump has not commented on recent polls, he has called past polls he doesn't like 'fake' polls.
And, in early June, when a Wall Street Journal poll showed him losing to Biden by 8 points, Trump called the numbers 'very unfair' and blamed the impeachment process.
'If I wasn’t constantly harassed for three years by fake and illegal investigations, Russia, Russia, Russia, and the Impeachment Hoax, I’d be up by 25 points on Sleepy Joe and the Do Nothing Democrats. Very unfair, but it is what it is!!!,' he tweeted on June 7.
There is good news for the president among the economic numbers in the Pew poll: 51 per cent express confidence in Trump's ability to handle the economy while only 48 per cent say the same of Biden.
Again, polling trends stay on track here. While Trump garners high ratings for his economic prowess, he is hurt by his handling of the coronavirus and race relations.
The Pew poll found that 35 per cent of voters said they believed President Trump could effectively handle race relations while 48 per cent said Biden could.
Only 41 per cent said they were confident in the president's ability to handle the public health impact of the coronavirus pandemic, which has infected 2.69 million Americans and killed more than 129,000.
But 52 per cent of those polled expressed confidence in Biden's ability to cope with the coronavirus.
The pandemic is the top topic on voters' minds, a new Reuters/Ipsos poll found, and could be the biggest factor in who they vote for in November.
The poll found that 81 per cent of Americans said they are 'very' or 'somewhat' concerned about the pandemic, including 7 out of ten Republicans.
And when asked the 'most important factor' in determining their vote, 27 per cent cited the candidate's plan to help the nation recover from the coronavirus while 21 per cent said it was the contender's economic plan.
Additionally, a new poll from Monmouth University out Wednesday found that 64 per cent of Americans are worried states are starting the reopening process too quickly compared to the 27 per cent who describe it as happening too slowly.
And the Monmouth poll showed Americans are starting to judge one another's behavior during the pandemic.
The survey found just 28 per cent said the public has done a good job dealing with the outbreak while 59 per cent described a bad job.
And confidence that the pandemic is under control has dropped by 25 points since March. That month, 62 per cent of Americans thought the country would be able to limit the COVID-19 outbreak. That number dropped to 37 per cent in June.
The Monmouth poll also found voters gave Trump poor marks for his handling of the disease: 54 per cent said he did a bad job to 40 per cent who praised him. Meanwhile, 65 per cent thought state's governors have handled the pandemic well.
Voters expressed confidence in Joe Biden's ability to handle the coronavirus pandemic with 52 per cent of those polled by Pew saying he would do a good job; a Reuters/Ipsos poll found a contender's handling of the disease could be a factor when voters go to the polls in November
And, in another troubling sign for the president, most of the respondents described the country as moving on the wrong track.
The Monmouth poll found 74 per cent said American is on the wrong track while only 18 per cent described it on the right track.
In the past that question has proven an accurate predictor of the country's willingness to give an incumbent a second term.
Just 12 per cent of Americans are proud of their country, 87 per cent are dissatisfied - and a majority say Donald Trump is a 'poor' or 'terrible' president
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July 02, 2020
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