President Trump's approval rating sank to 34% over the weekend, the lowest it's been since he took office. The rating, based on Gallup polling data from Friday, Saturday and Sunday, came after a week in which Trump threatened North Korea with "fire and fury", amid escalating tensions. Some of the polling data was collected after violence broke out at a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia on Saturday, and Trump faced criticism for not directly condemning the racist groups that organized the demonstration. (He more explicitly denounced white supremacists and neo-Nazi sympathizers on Monday.) Previously, Trump's lowest approval rating since taking office had been 35% in late March.
Since Gallup began presidential approval polls in 1945, six presidents have seen as low or lower approval ratings than Trump during their overall time in office: Harry Truman, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush.
However, Trump's first six months in office have been marked by some of the lowest early approval ratings of any President in modern history. In the graph here, you can compare Trump’s approval ratings over his first two hundred days with those of presidents dating back to Truman, when Gallup began the presidential approval poll:
Rico says he's down around where Obama, Clinton, and Nixon were...
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