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Trump’s support among Republican, white men on decline: Poll

US President Donald Trump speaks during the Women in Healthcare panel at the White House in Washington, DC, March 22, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

US President Donald Trump is quickly losing support among members of his Republican Party, white voters and men, a new poll suggests, underscoring that his approval among the core groups that make up his electoral base has begun to erode.

Just 37 percent of Americans say they approve of how Trump is doing his job as president, and 56 percent disapprove, the worst result for him so far in his young presidency, according to the Quinnipiac University poll released on Wednesday.

A Quinnipiac poll released on March 7 put the numbers at 41 percent and 52 percent respectively.

Trump’s approval among Republican voters dropped 10 points, to 81 percent, with 14 percent saying they disapprove.

Trump had also lost 6 percent of his supporters among men, with only 43 percent approving of his job.

According to the survey, White voters, Trump’s main supporter base, were also withdrawing their support from him. Only 44 percent of the voters said they approve of his job, down from 49 percent in early March.

‘Trump not honest’

Meanwhile, the poll also found that at 60 percent, a great majority of American voters doubt Trump’s honesty.

This is while, 55 percent did not even think he possessed the leadership skills required for the top job.

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The pessimism ran deeper, with 57 percent saying that Trump did not care about average Americans.

Unsubstantiated claims

Interestingly, nearly 75 percent of the respondents said they thought Trump and his government "very often" or "somewhat often" make statements without offering evidence to back them.

This is especially important since the Trump administration is under pressure to prove some of the president’s claims.

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Congress and intelligence agencies have asked Trump to provide them with evidence that he was “wiretapped” by his predecessor Barack Obama during the presidential campaign.

Trump has leveled various allegations against Obama and some American intelligence agencies, prompting legal investigations that often return with no evidence backing the claims.


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