Trump’s Approval Drops Following Mueller Report
President Donald Trump’s approval rating dropped
3 percentage points following the Thursday release of Special Counsel Robert
Mueller’s report on Russian attacks on U.S. elections and Trump’s efforts to
obstruct the probe.
The poll
was conducted by Reuters/Ipsos from Thursday afternoon to Friday morning. It
showed Trump’s approval at 37%, the president’s lowest this year. That’s down
from 40% on April 15 and from 43% after U.S.
Attorney General William Barr released a letter “summarizing” the Mueller
report in late March, Reuters reported.
The news agency noted that Mueller’s 448-page
report “does not appear to have convinced many to change their opinions”
about Trump, and the results were unsurprisingly split among party lines. Of
those who said they were familiar with the report, only 15% of those polled
said it had prompted them to change their views of Trump and the Russia
investigation.
On the issue of impeachment, 40% of those surveyed said
Trump should be impeached, compared to 42% who said he shouldn’t. And half of
the Americans polled said they agreed that Trump or someone working on his 2016
presidential campaign collaborated with Russia to influence the elections.
Fifty-eight percent said they believed Trump tried to obstruct the
investigation.
If you find any of these numbers discouraging, remember that
former President Richard Nixon’s approval ratings were over 50% shortly before
the Senate began holding televised
Watergate hearings in May 1973. When those hearings started, the percentage
of Americans who thought Nixon should be removed from office was at only 19%,
according to the Pew Research Center. That number had climbed to 57% by the
time Nixon resigned in August of the following year.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler said Friday
that he
would hold televised hearings on Trump’s conduct outlined in the Mueller
report. Nadler told WNYC FM’s
Brian Lehrer, “We will get to the bottom of this and educate the country about
what is going on.”