December 10, 2023
2 mins read

Biden’s approval ratings hit new low  

The results are similar to other recent national polls, which have largely either found a close race with no leader or have given Trump a narrow advantage…reports Asian Lite News

In the run-up to the US presidential polls, a new national Wall Street Journal poll has placed former President Donald Trump ‘narrowly ahead’ of President Je Biden in a hypothetical 2024 rematch, CNN reported.

It is pertinent that Biden’s approval currently stands only at 37 per cent among registered voters, according to the poll.

In a choice between Trump and Biden, 47 per cent of registered voters in the US currently say that they would be supporting Trump while 43 per cent say that they would be backing Biden, while a tenth (around 10 per cent) still remain undecided.

As per the new polls, Biden has been weighed down by relatively soft support among “disaffected Democrats.”

Registered voters’ presidential preference differs across several other scenarios included in the survey, highlighting the degree to which voters’ intentions remain fluid at this very early stage of the race, according to CNN.

The results are similar to other recent national polls, which have largely either found a close race with no leader or have given Trump a narrow advantage.

The Wall Street Journal poll finds Biden maintaining only 87 per cent of his 2020 supporters, compared with the 94 per cent of 2020 Trump voters who say they would back the Republican now, CNN reported.

“Voters who are undecided on the presidential race lean Democratic in other survey questions, suggesting that they could be persuaded to back Biden nearly a year from now,” the Journal noted.

Notably, when voters are prompted to think of a hypothetical scenario in which Trump is convicted of a felony in “either the classified documents or January 6th federal trials” prior to the election, they split almost evenly between the two candidates, with 46 per cent saying they would back Biden under those circumstances, and 45 per cent pushing their weight behind Trump.

Also, when potential third-party or independent candidates are included, Trump’s edge over Biden widens slightly.

In hypothetical matchups with two other potential Republican nominees, Biden ties with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (45 per cent DeSantis, 45 per cent Biden) but runs well behind former UN ambassador Nikki Haley (51 per cent Haley, 34 per cent Biden), according to CNN.

Meanwhile, the views of the national environment remain “unquestionably bleak”. Only 26 per cent of registered voters say the US has moved in the right direction on inflation over the past year. But, this number is up from 20 per cent who said the same in August.

The Wall Street Journal also looked at the upcoming GOP primary, finding Trump at 59 per cent among potential Republican primary voters nationally, with Haley and DeSantis effectively tied for a distant second place, at 15 per cent and 14 per cent respectively.

This is similar to other recent polling on the Republican primary, with most surveys giving Trump majority support among the potential GOP electorate nationally.

The poll was conducted on November 29 and December 4 among a random national sample of 1,500 registered voters. Results for the full sample of adults have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.5 points, according to CNN. (ANI)

ALSO READ-Europe’s Dilemma in Cyberspace, AI

Previous Story

EU lawmakers agree on artificial intelligence laws

Next Story

US, S Korea, Japan reaffirm N Korea’s denuclearisation obligation

Latest from -Top News

Call to Greylist Pakistan Over Terror Links

Freddy Svane, the former Danish Ambassador to India, said that it is high time for the world to acknowledge that Pakistan remains the epicentre of terrorism in the region….reports Asian Lite News

Colombia backs India on terror

The change in tone from Colombia is seen as diplomatically significant, especially given its forthcoming role as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). In a diplomatic correction welcomed

Yunus under fire for poll claims

The backlash was sparked by Yunus’ comments during a visit to Japan earlier this week, where he reportedly said that “no one except one party wants elections in December.” Bangladesh’s fragile political
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Row over award for AI-generated artwork  

Text-to-image AI systems are trained on billions of pairs of

ChatGPT-driven smart home voice assistant coming soon

Capecelatro explained by giving some examples of how ChatGPT-enabled voice