Donald Trump’s Approval Ratings Have Finally Stabilized, but What Does That Mean?
It’s possible that Trump is operating close to his ceiling right now—and it’s a very low ceiling.
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Donald Trump pauses during a campaign event on September 6th, 2016, in Virginia Beach, Virginia. (Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images) |
As
has been reported extensively, Donald Trump’s job approval ratings
started low relative to other new presidents and have declined ever
since. Yet, as Patrick Egan has noted, those ratings seem to have stabilized over the past few weeks, with an average approval rating around 43 percent. Has Trump found his floor? His ceiling? What does this mean?
There are a few ways to think about this. First, it’s worth noting that Barack Obama’s approval ratings were in the mid-40s for most of his presidency.
They didn’t start there, of course — he was in the low 60s at this
point in his first term — and his approval went up considerably during
his last year in office. But we should keep in mind that the economy was
expanding, the crime rate was dropping, and the United States was at
relative peace with other nations for most of Obama’s presidency. Those
are conditions most presidents would pay a high price for, and yet they
didn’t seem to benefit Obama much politically until the very end.
Why?
To a large extent, it’s because we’re living in a very polarized era.
Partisans tend to view new political information in a way that’s
advantageous for the party they like and disadvantageous for the party
they don’t like. Obama had the approval of 81 percent of Democrats even in 2010, when the Democrats got shellacked in the mid-term elections. He had 13 percent approval among Republicans that year. Trump right now has the support of 87 percent of Republicans and 8 percent of Democrats.

This
suggests that, in such a polarized era, it’s hard to do a whole lot
worse than 40 percent, and it’s hard to do a whole lot better than 50
percent. Your party will support you, the other party will oppose you,
and it’s really just a matter of independents moving around.
But
that’s not really the whole story. George W. Bush also governed during a
very polarized era, and he managed to have approval highs near 90
percent and lows near 20 percent. The difference there was that the
fundamental conditions of the country, which were relatively calm during
Obama’s presidency, really did rocket back and forth under Bush. His
highs came right after the 9/11 attacks (even Democrats were willing to
rally behind him for a while), and his lows came during a recession and a
prolonged war with Iraq (when even Republicans began to abandon him).
It takes a lot to shake partisans, but it does happen.
Part
of what’s driven Democrats and independents away from Trump so quickly
is Trump’s own behavior. He hasn’t made any of the bipartisan overtures
new presidents typically make, and he seems to have gone out of his way
to anger and alienate people who weren’t part of his electoral
coalition. That behavior really isn’t alienating many Republicans, 90
percent of whom voted for him after more than a year of similar
behavior. But it’s likely suppressing his support. It’s worth recalling
that his election odds improved in early November of last year at the
time he went relatively quiet on Twitter.
But
it’s also quite possible that Trump is operating close to his ceiling
right now. With each passing week, he is given greater credit or blame
for the fundamental conditions of the country. And given that economic
growth has been strong so far this year, inflation and gas prices remain
low, we’re not at war, crime remains low, etc., and he’s still in the
40s, it’s unlikely things will get a whole lot better for him. It’s
certainly possible a 9/11-like tragedy could induce a rally effect for
Trump, but it’s not obvious that it would.
Should
those fundamental conditions shift toward the worse — and keep in mind
it’s been roughly a decade since the U.S. last experienced a
recession — some Republicans would likely abandon Trump. And given how
few Democrats and independents are with him, we could see his ratings
quickly plummet.
In
the meantime, there’s good reason to think his popularity will stay
roughly as it is. Americans have a pretty good idea how Trump behaves
and governs at this point. Those who are approving of the job he’s doing
aren’t doing so out of ignorance — they like it this way.
Source: Pacific standard
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