46 percent of voters say his policies are making the economy worse rather than better, while 28 percent say the opposite (the rest had no opinion).
I think that 20 point gap is very significant. That’s too many for honest answers. It looks to me like either people in the left afraid to say things are going well (unlikely) and people still on the right, afraid to say it’s looking bad.
Trump’s whole strategy here was to tank things so quickly that there could be no resistance from the left and that the Republican base would remain loyal.
This is a real crack in that. 28% support days that his base it liking where we’re headed, but he’s losing the Republicans who don’t support him particularly.
I think that 20 point gap is very significant. That’s too many for honest answers. It looks to me like either people in the left afraid to say things are going well (unlikely) and people still on the right, afraid to say it’s looking bad.
Trump’s whole strategy here was to tank things so quickly that there could be no resistance from the left and that the Republican base would remain loyal.
This is a real crack in that. 28% support days that his base it liking where we’re headed, but he’s losing the Republicans who don’t support him particularly.