Photorealistic illustration of a Marist poll graphic displaying Donald Trump's 37% job approval rating and 59% disapproval, with midterm election context.
Photorealistic illustration of a Marist poll graphic displaying Donald Trump's 37% job approval rating and 59% disapproval, with midterm election context.
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Marist poll puts Trump job approval at 37%, with disapproval at 59%

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A new NPR/PBS News/Marist poll finds 37% of U.S. adults approve of President Donald Trump’s job performance and 59% disapprove, while Democrats hold a 10-point edge on the generic congressional ballot in the run-up to the 2026 midterms.

A new NPR/PBS News/Marist national poll conducted April 27–30, 2026, among 1,322 U.S. adults found 37% approve of President Donald Trump’s overall job performance, while 59% disapprove and 4% are unsure.

Marist said the poll’s results have a ±3.1 percentage-point margin of error for the full adult sample.

The poll also found Democrats ahead on the “generic congressional ballot” question: 52% of registered voters said they would be more likely to support the Democratic candidate in their district, compared with 42% for the Republican candidate.

The Marist release characterized the 59% overall disapproval figure as the highest level of disapproval the firm has recorded for Trump across both of his terms.

Was die Leute sagen

X users shared Marist poll details showing Trump's approval at 37% and disapproval at 59%, with Democrats leading the generic ballot by 10 points. Reactions included neutral reporting on low approval and Iran/economy handling, skepticism calling polls 'bogus' or comparing to other surveys, and negative takes on Trump weakening U.S. standing or gas prices. High-engagement posts from poll trackers and media accounts dominated discussions.

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Illustration of a poll chart showing Trump's 36% job approval rating and economic disapproval, with icons of gas and groceries.
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New NPR/PBS News/Marist poll puts Trump job approval at 36%, with broad disapproval on the economy

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President Donald Trump’s job approval rating stands at 36% in a new NPR/PBS News/Marist poll conducted June 8-11, 2026, with 59% disapproving. The survey also finds roughly six in 10 Americans disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy, amid persistent worries about costs such as gas and groceries.

The latest Criteria poll shows President José Antonio Kast's approval at 37 percent, with disapproval falling to 49 percent. The survey was conducted on May 21 with 1,002 cases.

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President Lee Jae Myung's approval rating rose slightly to 61.9 percent last week, staying above 60 percent for the fifth straight week, a Realmeter survey showed Monday. Disapproval fell to 32.8 percent. Realmeter partly attributed the gain to a rebound in the local currency and stock market amid ceasefire expectations in the US war against Iran.

CNN chief data analyst Harry Enten warned that Democrats are trailing historical benchmarks in popularity ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Speaking on Monday with anchor John Berman, Enten highlighted Republicans' current five-point lead in net favorability. He assessed Democrats' chances as better for the House than the Senate.

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A Datafolha poll released on April 11, 2026, shows the negative evaluation of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government steady at 40%, while positive ratings fell from 32% to 29%. Disapproval of Lula's performance rose to 51%, with approval at 45%. Conducted April 7-9, the survey signals a tight race ahead of the 2026 elections.

Two polls published on Sunday, March 29, show declining approval for President José Antonio Kast less than three weeks into his term amid a historic fuel price hike crisis. Cadem reported 51% disapproval against 43% approval, while Criteria found 47% disapproval versus 43% approval.

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A recent survey shows Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger with 47% approval and 46% disapproval, the weakest early-term rating for a state governor in decades. The poll highlights erosion among independents, who now split nearly evenly on her performance. Skepticism surrounds her affordability agenda amid proposed tax hikes and other policies.

 

 

 

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