Polls show Biden reaping solid approval ratings with popular policies
Category: News & Politics
Via: jbb • 3 years ago • 3 commentsBy: Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann (NBC News)
The facts to edify misinformed Fox News viewers...
April 16, 2021, 12:52 PM UTC By Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
WASHINGTON — In the last 48 hours, we've seen four different national polls that all show President Biden's approval rating above water — with the highest (Pew) at 59 percent approve, 39 percent disapprove, and with the lowest (Quinnipiac) at 48 percent approve, 42 percent disapprove.
It's a break with former President Donald Trump, whose job rating remained mostly underwater during his presidency, even in his first 100 days on the job.
And one of the reasons why Biden is staying above water is that almost everything he's deliberately tried to make part of his agenda during his honeymoon period is popular.
That Covid-19 relief law? It remains widely popular. (A Monmouth poll finds 63 percent of Americans supporting it, including 43 percent who do so strongly.)
His infrastructure plan? It pretty much matches his job rating in the Quinnipiac and NPR/PBS/Marist surveys.
Increased taxes for corporations and Americans making more than $400,000? Popular.
What about making long-term health care part of his infrastructure plan? NPR/PBS/Marist shows 58 percent of Americans believing that this is part of the country's infrastructure, versus 39 percent who don't.
Chuck Todd on Biden's bipartisan battle for support on guns and infrastructure
April 11, 202103:00
The exceptions to Biden's popular agenda are his Afghanistan withdrawal (where the polling has been more mixed than you might expect for a 20-year war) and Biden's unpopular handling of the border (which wasn't something he put on his early to-do list, but which is now something he clearly owns).
Bottom line: Biden has been careful not to push policies that aren't significantly popular with the public. (In fact, more controversial proposals to expand the Supreme Court and advance reparations bills are not coming from the White House.)
And that's a reversal from the last four years, when the focus was on appealing to the base rather than to the 50 percent-plus.
Yesterday's big Russia-related news
There were two big pieces of news yesterday as the Biden slapped sanctions on Russian entities and individuals.
One, it turns out that the intel community has determined that the evidence on that widely reported Russia-Afghanistan-bounty story isn't conclusive — and that finding cuts against Biden's rhetoric during the 2020 presidential campaign.
Two, the Biden administration says that a longtime associate of Trump 2016 campaign chief Paul Manafort — Konstantin Kilimnik — gave Russian intelligence agencies "sensitive information on polling and campaign strategy," per CNBC.
And that assertion on the 2016 polling goes further than the Mueller investigation or the Senate Intel Committee determined.
Tweet of the day
Excited to share a project I've been working on for over a month, a photo essay of portraits documenting just a handful of people who experienced the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan 6, and how they're processing the trauma 100 days after.
It's here: https://t.co/abRxOnGKqY
— Frank Thorp V (@frankthorp) April 16, 2021
Data Download: The numbers you need to know today
At least 8: The number of people shot at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis last night.
63 percent: The share of Americans who say that a "not guilty" verdict for Derek Chauvin would have a negative effect on race relations, according to a new Monmouth poll.
31,633,796: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That's 71,850 more than yesterday morning.)
569,218: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far, per the most recent data from NBC News. (That's 792 more than yesterday morning.)
ICYMI: What else is happening in the world
NBC's Carol Lee reports on how some elite members of the military are swapping extremist sentiments in exclusive Facebook groups.
Voters are quite happy with Joe Biden as President...
President Biden is doing what must be done.
One thing he must do is counter, unmask, reveal and prosecute those who knowingly foster lies and untruths in their efforts to weaken and diffuse American democracy. Russia is behind this and Americans in and out of government are aiding them in that effort.
To say we need not look far for evidence is a huge understatement...