Poll figures for President Biden dropped to a four-year low in dissatisfaction from voters over how he is running the country, the poll found.
Emerson College researchers released the024 National Poll showing how Democrat and Republican voters feel after the election. The poll finds President-elect Donald Trump has 54% of voter support. His favorability rating was closer to 48% before the election.
Some of most recent polls suggest that Trump is now viewed favorably by a majority of Americans, with the newest survey released by Emerson College on Tuesday showing the president-elect with a net 8 percent favorability rating.
President-elect Donald Trump notched a 54% approval rating, one of his all-time highest, compared to about 46% who disapprove of him, an Emerson College poll found.
President-elect Donald Trump's popularity is on the rise and the voters who went against him think World War III is likely.
President-elect Trump’s favorability climbed by 6 points after he was elected president earlier this month, a poll released Tuesday found. The president-elect’s favorability rating hit 54 percent
While President-elect Donald Trump’s favorability has climbed since the election, Vice President Kamala Harris and Vice President-elect JD Vance are eyed as the favorites to run for the White House in 2028.
Americans are most thankful for family and friends, which may be why they'll try to steer away from politics at Thanksgiving.
Already, Democrats had pressured Biden to drop out of the race because his polling numbers plummeted after the first presidential debate. Harris replaced Biden in the hopes of winning back voters who were skeptical of a second Biden administration while also appealing to a wider swath of citizens.
A former Georgia poll worker has been indicted after reportedly issuing a bomb threat against election workers, the Justice Department said in a press release Wednesday. In the release, the
More than half of voters ages 50 and up prioritized inflation, the economy and jobs, and Social Security when determining their vote, according to the AARP.
Pollster J. Ann Selzer examined the pre-election Iowa Poll's methods and demographics for clues about its wide disparity with the actual vote