Trump's Approval Rating Drops to 36%, New Second-Term ...
President Donald Trump's job approval rating has slipped to a new second-term low point and is approaching his all-time low of 34%.
news.gallup.comHere’s the latest on Trump’s approval as of now:
Polls show mixed results with fluctuations across different outlets. Some trackers in 2025-2026 period reported approval in the low- to mid-40s, while others showed temporary upticks tied to economic or affordability messaging, and still others tracked declines approaching 40% or lower at various points. These swings reflect partisan splits and responses to policy debates, inflation concerns, and national security events.
Notable themes in recent polling include: Republican-leaning respondents generally expressing stronger approval than independents or Democrats, concerns about the economy and cost of living influencing ratings, and occasional cross-year shifts around major policy announcements or speeches.
If you’d like, I can pull a concise, up-to-the-minute snapshot from a specific pollster (e.g., Gallup, Reuters/Ipsos, AP-NORC) and present it in a quick table with dates, sample sizes, and margins of error.
President Donald Trump's job approval rating has slipped to a new second-term low point and is approaching his all-time low of 34%.
news.gallup.comMILWAUKEE — A new Marquette Law School Poll national survey finds President Donald Trump’s overall approval rating stands at 45%, with 55% disapproval. In May, approval was 46% and disapproval was 54%. Republicans and Trump voters continue to express strong approval, while Democrats are almost uniformly negative. Independents are substantially more negative than positive, although approval rose in July with this group. Table 1 shows approval by party since January. (All results in the tables...
www.marquette.eduNewsweek's tracker today shows that Trump's approval rating stands at 49 percent, while his disapproval also stands at 49 percent.
www.newsweek.comFour leading pollsters released surveys this week, amid the president's controversial National Guard deployments to the nation's capital. Here's what they say.
www.usatoday.comNew CNN/SSRS survey shows decline in president's popularity as 68% of respondents say things going badly
www.theguardian.com