President Trump Job Approval Rising, Along With Our Economy!

army judge

Super Moderator
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WELL, WELL, WELL, as usual, those ALLEGEDLY calling themselves "purveyors of all things Trump, are dead wrong, once more once!!!!"

President Donald Trump's trip last week to the Middle East and his administration's recent progress on trade agreements appear to have boosted his perception among American voters, with four national polls showing his favorability rating above 47%, consistent with the level following his inauguration.


Polls released Monday by Morning Consult, Rasmussen Reports, and Harvard CAPS/Harris showed Trump's approval rating at 48%, 49%, and 47%, respectively, and a Daily Mail/J.L. Partners poll released Sunday showed his approval rating at 50%.

"
Despite the doom and gloom headlines from news organizations, the American people actually feel great about the direction of the country," White House principal deputy secretary and senior adviser Harrison Fields told Newsmax. "What's to hate? We are undoing the widely unpopular agenda of the previous office holder, uprooting waste, fraud, and abuse, and chugging along on the great American Comeback."

The Daily Mail poll was conducted May 13-14 among 1,003 registered voters with a margin of error of +/- 3.1 percentage points. Trump's approval rating is up 5 percentage points from a poll taken 100 days into his second term, nearly three weeks ago.

"The most important thing this shows is that Trump can bounce back when some of his voters waver," James Johnson, co-founder of J.L. Partners, told the Daily Mail. "People who were concerned about the sense of direction and strength after tariffs reversals are now back on board as they see the president doing what they feel he does best: making deals."

The Morning Consult poll was conducted May 16-19 among 2,208 registered voters with a margin of error of +/- 2.1 percentage points. Rasmussen Reports' daily presidential tracking poll sampled 1,500 likely voters, with a margin of error of +/- 2.5 percentage points. The Harvard CAPS/Harris poll was conducted May 14-15 among 1,903 registered voters with a margin of error of +/- 2.2 percentage points.

The Morning Consult poll showed Trump's highest approval rating since mid-March after it reached a low of 45% in April. His disapproval rating of 50% dropped 3 percentage points from late April.

Trump's approval rating in the Harvard/Harris poll reached 52% in February and hasn't dipped below 47% since. Although it was 48% in the April poll, the number of those who strongly approved jumped to 30% from 28%. Only 47% disapproved of his job performance while 5% responded "don't know."

"The majority of Trump's policies continue to see strong support, especially on immigration and government efficiency, even though there is concern Trump has exceeded guardrails with executive orders and tariffs," Mark Penn, co-director of the Harvard/Harris poll, said in a statement. "If he is able to successfully lower the price of prescription drugs and hold down the fort on inflation, he will be able to unlock 10% more of voters in his approval rating."



 
Yeah, ROFL LOMAO

just came back from a Wal Mart, 98 dollars for a kids radio flyer wagon, 180 bucks for a Lego mid sized pay set, die cast models that were under 7 bucks are now 12 dollars.

Dump Trump and his idiotic BS can not happen soon enough. It stats with Mid terms--- I didn't vote for this and I am doing a RECALL.
 
Dump Trump and his idiotic BS can not happen soon enough. It stats with Mid terms--- I didn't vote for this and I am doing a RECALL.


A sitting U.S. president cannot be recalled. The U.S. Constitution only allows for a president's removal through impeachment or the 25th Amendment, and there are no federal recall mechanisms in place.

Key Takeaways
  • The U.S. Constitution only allows for a president's removal through impeachment or the 25th Amendment.
  • No federal recall mechanisms exist, though some states allow recalls of state officials.
Having regrets about your vote for president?

Sorry, there's no mulligan. The U.S. Constitution does not allow for the recall of a president outside of the impeachment process or the removal of a commander-in-chief who is deemed unfit for office under the 25th Amendment.

In fact, there are no political recall mechanisms available to voters at the federal level; voters can't recall members of Congress, either.

However, 19 states and the District of Columbia allow for the recall of elected officials serving in state positions: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin. Virginia is unique in that it lets residents petition, not vote, for an official's removal.

That is not to say there has never been support for a recall process at the federal level. In fact, a U.S. senator from New Jersey by the name of Robert Hendrickson proposed a constitutional amendment in 1951 that would have allowed voters to recall a president by holding a second election to undo the first. Congress never approved the measure, but the idea lives on.

After the 2016 presidential election, some voters who disapproved of the elected president or who were disappointed that Donald Trump lost the popular vote but still defeated Hillary Clinton tried to launch a petition to recall the billionaire real-estate developer.


There is no way for voters to orchestrate a political recall of the president. There is no mechanism set forth in the U.S. Constitution that allows for the removal of a failing president save for impeachment, which is applied only in instances of "high crimes and misdemeanors" no matter how much the public and members of Congress feel that a president should be dismissed from office.


 

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