- President
Donald Trump saw his approval numbers plummet over the course of April as the coronavirus pandemic ravaged the US. - Meanwhile, GOP governors who took coronavirus seriously from the start, and in some cases pushed against Trump (who downplayed the threat), have seen a surge in approval.
Ohio Gov.Mike DeWine , a Republican who took early steps to contain the outbreak, has become especially popular with his constituents.- Republican governors who've followed Trump's lead on
COVID-19 , such as Ron DeSantis of Florida, have not experienced a similar polling bump. - Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
President Donald Trump's polling numbers are tanking across the board amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Americans increasingly disapprove of his handling of the presidency as well as his approach to the coronavirus pandemic, and he's trailing former Vice President Joe Biden in the 2020 race, polling shows.
Comparatively, a number of GOP governors have enjoyed a surge in approval over their handling of coronavirus. Unlike Trump, these Republican leaders have consistently taken the threat of the virus seriously while following the guidance of public health experts.
After taking steps that left the US less prepared for a pandemic in his first three years as president, Trump ignored warnings from the intelligence community and top advisers on the potentially devastating impact of the virus, while publicly downplaying the threat for weeks.
But as the coronavirus outbreak escalated in startling ways across the US in March, leading the president to declare a national emergency, Trump saw his approval rating briefly go up in what pollsters dubbed a rally-around-the-flag effect. That quickly changed in April as the US death toll and unemployment rose to astronomical levels, while Trump simultaneously turned daily White House press briefings into campaign rally-like events in which he dominated the spotlight, berating reporters and spreading false information in the process.
The contrast between Trump's handling of the pandemic and the approach taken by a number of Republican governors could not be more stark. And the consequences of this with voters appears to be playing out in the polls.
Americans increasingly disapprove of Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic
"We did all the right moves," the president said on Wednesday.
"The federal government rose to the challenge, and this is a great success story," Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser, said the same day.
Though Trump and top figures in his administration have sought to paint a rosy, positive picture of the government's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, the numbers on the crisis tell a different story. The US is currently the epicenter of the pandemic, with the most reported cases and confirmed fatalities.
As of Thursday, there were well over one million confirmed coronavirus cases in the US, alongside over 61,000 deaths. For perspective, more Americans have died from coronavirus in a matter of weeks than the number of US service members killed in the Vietnam War, which the US was directly involved in for nearly a decade. What's more, recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests the US death toll from coronavirus is actually much higher than the official count.
Meanwhile, roughly 30 million Americans have filed for unemployment over the past six weeks as the US economy continues to plummet due to the pandemic and its restrictions.
As the crisis has worsened in the US, Trump's polling numbers have also taken a nosedive.
An Emerson College Polling national poll released on Tuesday found that Trump's job approval rating dropped five percentage points since March, from 46% to 41%, while approval of the president's handling of coronavirus dropped a whopping 10 percentage points, from 49% to 39%.
A new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, released Wednesday, showed a majority of Americans (55%) disapprove of Trump's handling of the pandemic, which marked a six-point increase in disapproval over the past month.
And Morning Consult polling released on Monday showed that since reaching a high point in mid-March, net approval of the president's handling of COVID-19 (the disease caused by the novel coronavirus) hit a new low and dropped 22 points. Overall, a majority of voters (51%) disapprove of Trump's coronavirus response, the poll found, while 43% approve. The survey was conducted between April 24 and April 26, in the days that followed Trump's controversial, dangerous suggestion that disinfectant or sunlight could be injected or used "inside the body" to combat coronavirus.
In contrast to Trump, the Morning Consult survey found that seven-in-10 voters approve of their state and local governments' response to the virus.
Similarly, a new, massive survey of 22,000 Americans conducted by researchers at Harvard, Northeastern University, and Rutgers, found residents in all 50 states approve of their governor's handling of the coronavirus pandemic more highly than Trump. Three out of the four highest-rated governors in the poll were Republicans from the states of Ohio,
GOP governors who have not followed Trump's example have enjoyed a polling bump
Republican Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio has been praised across the country over the early steps he took to protect his state from coronavirus, such as being the first governor to close schools, and his constituents evidently appreciate his handling of the crisis as well. While Trump has pushed for states to reopen to get the economy going, DeWine has closely followed the advice of public health experts and championed a more cautious approach.
A Baldwin Wallace University poll conducted in Ohio and released on Monday found just 43% of people in the state have a favorable view of Trump, while 75% of respondents had a favorable view of DeWine.
The poll also found about half of Ohioans approve of Trump's handling of COVID-19, while a whopping 85% said they approved of DeWine's approach to the virus. And three-in-four respondents (75%) said DeWine was doing a better job handling COVID-19 than Trump.
DeWine, who also broke from Trump by encouraging voting by mail amid the pandemic, has seen a much bigger polling bump than Republican governors like Ron DeSantis of Florida who tend to take their queues from the president. The Florida governor has been widely criticized for being too slow to respond to the pandemic, and for being too quick to reopen and ease restrictions.
A FiveThirtyEight analysis of polling on governors in the final quarter of 2019 versus polling on their handling of COVID-19 showed that the Florida governor's pre-pandemic numbers were actually stronger, as the leaders of other states (including many Democratic governors) all saw a massive, double-digit surge in approval in their approach to the crisis. Before the pandemic, DeSantis' approval rating was 58%, the analysis showed, while the approval for his handling of the virus was at 51%.
Beyond DeWine, GOP Gov.
Hogan made national headlines this month after the governor and his wife, Yumi Hogan, orchestrated a deal to obtain testing kits for coronavirus from South Korea. The nationwide testing kit shortage has been among the most criticized aspects of the US government's response to the pandemic, as its significantly limited the country's ability to gain a full picture of the scale of the outbreak within its borders.
As governors have begged the federal government for more assistance and supplies, Trump has consistently said it's up to states to gain the necessary materials. Though Hogan essentially followed Trump's directive in buying test kits from South Korea, the president subsequently attacked the Maryland governor.
—Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 20, 2020
Gov.
Baker has openly chastised Trump on several occasions during the crisis, including on the president's push to reopen the country as quickly as possible.
The Massachusetts governor also recently slammed the president's executive order to suspend immigration to the US (with some exceptions) due to the pandemic. "I'm opposed to the decision that the president made," Baker said last Tuesday. "I'm opposed to the order. It doesn't make any sense and I don't think it makes us any safer."
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