Trump is the second most unpopular new president in decades
Donald Trump started his second term in office with a slew of executive orders that have shaken up the United States. However, it appears most Americans aren’t too impressed with the President already if recent polling is to be believed.
The polling aggregator firm 538 revealed that Trump’s initial approval rating sat at just 7+ points upon entering office. To put that into perspective, 49% of US adults approved of the President upon his entering office while 41% disapproved of him.
The British news outlet Telegraph pointed out that Trump’s approval upon entering office was the second lowest of any new president since the end of the Second World War.
Trump was only beaten by himself in 2016 when he entered office with an extremely low approval rating of +3.6. Just 44.6% of Americans approved of the President the first he entered office, far worse than Barack Obama or Joe Biden.
Obama entered office with a 63.3% approval. 16.5% of Americans disapproved of Obama upon entering office, giving him an outstanding +46.9% net approval rating. This is far higher than Trump’s past and present net approval ratings.
Even Biden entered office on sturdier footing with the American people than Trump has in his second term. Biden entered office with a net approval rating of 21.8%. He saw a majority of the country approve of him at 53.5% compared to 31.7% who disapproved.
“While it does seem Trump is getting a honeymoon to some extent, his numbers are still not impressive by historical standards,” Kyle Kondik, a political analyst at the University of Virginia Center for Politics, said according to The Telegraph.
So how did the other recent US Presidents fair upon entering office compared to Donald Trump? The Telegraph included a chart of the approval numbers for every President upon entering office since 1952, and Trump’s figures didn't look too good in comparison to his competition. Let’s take a look at that list now.
Elected: 1952
Approve: 68.0%
Disapprove: 7.0%
Net Approval: +61
Elected: 1960
Approve: 72.0%
Disapprove: 6.0%
Net Approval: +66
Elected: 1968
Approve: 59.0%
Disapprove: 5.0%
Net Approval: +54
Elected: 1976
Approve: 66.0%
Disapprove: 8.0%
Net Approval: +58
Elected: 1980
Approve: 51.0%
Disapprove: 13.0%
Net Approval: +38
Elected: 1988
Approve: 61.5%
Disapprove: 12.3%
Net Approval: +49.3
Elected: 1992
Approve: 54.4%
Disapprove: 20.3%
Net Approval: +34.1
Elected: 2000
Approve: 44.9%
Disapprove: 17.0%
Net Approval: +29.9
Elected: 2008
Approve: 63.3%
Disapprove: 16.5%
Net Approval: +46.9
Elected: 2016
Approve: 44.6%
Disapprove: 41.4%
Net Approval: +3.2
Elected: 2020
Approve: 53.5%
Disapprove: 31.7%
Net Approval: +21.8
Elected: 2024
Approve: 49.8%
Disapprove: 42.8%
Net Approval: +7
While past approval rating numbers may show that recent presidents have enjoyed relatively large approval upon entering office, they also reveal that Trump could be a truly uniquely divisive figure in American politics, or that US politics today, in general, are far more partisan than in previous decades.