Gallup will no longer track presidential approval ratings after more than eight decades doing so, the public opinion polling agency confirmed to The Hill on Wednesday. The company said starting this ...
Gallup has scrapped its presidential approval tracking polls for good just as President Trump hits rock bottom in its numbers. The venerable public opinion firm announced Wednesday that it would no ...
On Thursday, Rasmussen’s daily tracker showed the president at 41 percent approval and 57 percent disapproval. On Wednesday, the president's approval rating was 43 percent, down from 44 percent the ...
President Donald Trump’s approval rating has dramatically changed course with Hispanic voters, according to data from a national polling series. A new ActiVote survey shows a sharp rebound in Trump’s ...
President Donald Trump's approval rating has remained about the same in the latest polls, even as his administration continues to face controversies. The deaths of two individuals shot by federal ...
One of America’s top pollsters will no longer track the president’s approval rating, ending a decades-long practice. Analytics company Gallup confirmed to The Hill on Wednesday that it would cease ...
The monthly poll has been used to measure presidential performance for almost nine decades. By Ruth Igielnik After nearly 90 years, the Gallup Organization will no longer track presidential approval ...
Gallup will no longer measure presidential approval, the analytics firm confirmed on Feb. 11. Founded by George Gallup in 1935, the Washington, DC-based management company began tracking the president ...
Two men from headquarters walked out to the corral to tell the pollster the news. They were a big man and a little man. They were identically attired, in a dark suit and dark glasses. Both carried a ...
Feb. 11 (UPI) --Gallup will stop measuring and publishing presidential approval ratings this year, the analytics firm announced on Wednesday. The company said in a statement that it is getting out of ...
Gallup has been a pioneer of presidential approval surveys since the 1930s, now pivoting its focus amid growing threats from President Donald Trump toward pollsters who publish unfavorable findings ...