Overview
- Quinnipiac’s latest national survey puts President Trump at 38 percent approval and 55 percent disapproval among registered voters.
- Approval among men has slipped to 41 percent in the Quinnipiac data, marking a new second‑term low with that group.
- After steep early‑year declines, Trump’s standing with independents ticked up modestly in the April Quinnipiac wave to 27 percent approval.
- Republican voters remain firmly behind the president at about 88 percent approval, and the White House cast recent surveys aside by calling the 2024 election the ultimate measure of support.
- A Verasight mapping project finds Trump below 50 percent approval in 19 states he carried in 2024 and underwater in 31 GOP‑held districts, which its CEO says reflects broad, gradual softening that could test incumbents, even as seniors hold near 44 percent approval and vote at higher rates.