Biden approval polling tracker
Reuters / Ipsos

59% of Americans disapprove of the president

Updated monthly

Last updated

Credibility interval
Approval

You need to know It's important to check the credibility interval when looking at different demographics in this poll. Credibility interval measures the level of precision, and polls of smaller demographic groups will be less precise. Read more in the methodology below.

Democrats
Republicans
White
Non-White
No college
College
Urban
Suburban
Rural
Men
Women
18 to 39 year olds
40 and older
Less than $75K
$75K+
Northeast
Midwest
South
West

Note: Data is weekly through Dec. 20, 2022 and monthly starting Jan. 2023.

Notes from the newsroom

Biden's approval rating falls to lowest level in nearly two years

May 21, 2024

U.S. President Joe Biden's public approval rating this month fell to its lowest level in almost two years, tying the lowest reading of his presidency in a warning sign for his reelection effort, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.

The four-day poll, which closed on Monday, showed just 36% of Americans approve of Biden's job performance as president, down from 38% in April. It was a return to the lowest approval rating of his presidency, last seen in July 2022. While this month's drop was within the poll's 3 percentage point margin of error, it could bode poorly for Biden as he faces off with Republican Donald Trump in the Nov. 5 presidential election.

Biden, a Democrat, has been largely tied with Trump in national polls asking voters how they will vote. But Trump has had slight leads over Biden in many polls in the states seen as most likely to determine the winner in the U.S. Electoral College.

The poll laid out Biden's weaknesses as well as a few strengths. The state of the economy was seen as the top issue, picked by 23% of respondents as the most important problem facing the country. Some 21% saw political extremism as the top issue and 13% picked immigration.

Some 40% of respondents in the poll said Trump, who was president from 2017 to 2021, had better policies for the U.S. economy, compared to 30% who picked Biden, while the rest said they didn't know or didn't answer the question.

Trump had a significant edge on immigration, with 42% of respondents preferring his approach to the issue, while 25% picked Biden.

Biden had a modest advantage on the issue of political extremism, with 34% of respondents picking the president's approach and 30% saying Trump was better on the issue.

Respondents said they thought Trump had the better approach to foreign conflicts and terrorism, with 36% favoring Trump in that area, compared with 29% who favored Biden.

The state of the U.S. economy looms as one of the larger factors weighing on Biden's hopes of reelection.

Voters have been stung by several years of fast-rising consumer prices, though inflation has slowed considerably in recent months and the jobless rate has been below 4% for more than two years. Biden's age, at 81, is also a concern for voters.

Also weighing on the president, a separate Reuters/Ipsos poll this month showed that many Democrats disapprove of Biden's response to Israel's war on Hamas militants. The poll published on Tuesday did not ask if Americans approve of Biden's support for Israel's war effort in Gaza, which sharply divides Democrats.

Looming over Trump, 77, are four criminal prosecutions, including a New York criminal hush money trial due to wrap up next week. Trump on Tuesday opted not to testify in the case, which involves charges he falsified business records, bringing his defense to a quick conclusion and clearing the way for jurors to begin deliberations next week. Two other pending trials are tied to his efforts to overturn his loss to Biden in the 2020 presidential election.

Trump falsely claims his 2020 election defeat resulted from fraud. He included the claim in a fiery speech shortly before hundreds of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Five people died.

Jason Lange

Reuters Correspondent

The top issue

The economy continues to be the most important issue concerning Americans, 5 weeks running.

Note: The categories names have been shortened from how they appear in the survey. Find the original phrasing at the bottom of this page.

Notes The Reuters/Ipsos poll is conducted online and in English throughout the United States. Every poll has a minimum sample size of 1,000 adults. The poll has been in operation since 2012. Beginning in January 2023, the poll incorporated an improved random sampling model.

Category names in the survey of top issues have been shortened as follows: “The economy” is shortened from “Economy, unemployment, and jobs”; “Public health” from “Public health, disease, and illness”; “Health care” from “Health care system”; “Crime” from “Crime or corruption”; “Inequality” from “Inequality and discrimination”; “Environment” from “Environment and climate”; “Terrorism” from “Terrorism and extremism”; “War/conflict” from “War and foreign conflicts”; “Abortion rights” from “The end of national abortion rights” and “Extremism” from “Political extremism or threats to democracy”.

Correction This page previously showed incorrect results for the polls conducted July 25-26 and October 24-25, 2022.

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Ally J. Levine

Graphics

Chris Canipe, Travis Hartman

Data and development

Minami Funakoshi, Jon McClure