Maps of approval rating for Trump from January to June 2017

A map showing the effect of the Fake News war on Trump, interesting. Just relax Trump will destroy the left and their fake news pals in the media.
 
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years


Keep in mind, that the maps were brought to you by the Gallup polling organization.

Gallup is the most pro-GOP of any of the pollsters. They get paid to shill for the GOP.

Hence, your panic.

What "panic"? Hillary is still not President, isn't she?

My investments are kicking ass, my property value is going up while my property taxes are down, I have a glut of guns and ammunition left over from the Obama years, we have a new conservative Supreme Court Justice and will probably get a couple more, ISIS is being methodically wiped off the face of this planet, all the racial unrest of the Obama era seems to have disappeared, we haven't had a terrorist attack on our soil since Trump was elected, my fridge is stocked full of ice cold beer, and we're going to throw something on the grill this afternoon.

No panic here. :banana:


Republicans have 2 options

1. Remove Trump from office asap or
2. Burn down the entire party in 2018--2020--& beyond

If Republicans can do 8 investigations into Benghazi, it's not hard to imagine what Democrats will do with Treason, Obstruction & Lies when they take over in 2018. You'll also get a great education into what that Emoluments clause in the Constitution is all about--which is also impeachable if Democrats don't agree to the current setup.
Two plaintiffs join suit against Trump, alleging breach of emoluments clause
The Array of Conflicts of Interest Facing the Trump Presidency
Hillary
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years
Trump won the popular vote.
Jesus would tell you to stop that nonsense.
Trump would whip Jesus's ass in Miss. Just saying.

Assuming the dems find a non-toxic nominee (and I'm not sure Kamilla Harris fits the bill), running against Trump may be enough, especially if the gop makes a much a muck of healthcare and the Turtle is going for by not aiming for some bipartisan compromise. But, those underemployed white former union folks in the Rust Belt aren't just coming back to the Dems because of Trump, even if Trump breaks every promise he made, and he probably will.

The dems have to win all three of Pa, Mich and Wisc or Fla and at least one of those. Trump may well go off for his media career and let Pence run.
 
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years


Keep in mind, that the maps were brought to you by the Gallup polling organization.

Gallup is the most pro-GOP of any of the pollsters. They get paid to shill for the GOP.

Hence, your panic.

What "panic"? Hillary is still not President, isn't she?

My investments are kicking ass, my property value is going up while my property taxes are down, I have a glut of guns and ammunition left over from the Obama years, we have a new conservative Supreme Court Justice and will probably get a couple more, ISIS is being methodically wiped off the face of this planet, all the racial unrest of the Obama era seems to have disappeared, we haven't had a terrorist attack on our soil since Trump was elected, my fridge is stocked full of ice cold beer, and we're going to throw something on the grill this afternoon.

No panic here. :banana:


Republicans have 2 options

1. Remove Trump from office asap or
2. Burn down the entire party in 2018--2020--& beyond

If Republicans can do 8 investigations into Benghazi, it's not hard to imagine what Democrats will do with Treason, Obstruction & Lies when they take over in 2018. You'll also get a great education into what that Emoluments clause in the Constitution is all about--which is also impeachable if Democrats don't agree to the current setup.
Two plaintiffs join suit against Trump, alleging breach of emoluments clause
The Array of Conflicts of Interest Facing the Trump Presidency
Hillary
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years
Trump won the popular vote.
Jesus would tell you to stop that nonsense.
Trump would whip Jesus's ass in Miss. Just saying.

Assuming the dems find a non-toxic nominee (and I'm not sure Kamilla Harris fits the bill), running against Trump may be enough, especially if the gop makes a much a muck of healthcare and the Turtle is going for by not aiming for some bipartisan compromise. But, those underemployed white former union folks in the Rust Belt aren't just coming back to the Dems because of Trump, even if Trump breaks every promise he made, and he probably will.

The dems have to win all three of Pa, Mich and Wisc or Fla and at least one of those. Trump may well go off for his media career and let Pence run.

Trump is done already.

There has never been a President in this nation's history that was so naive and frankly stupid enough to make enemies out of the 3 most powerful agencies in this country. The media, our intelligence agencies and the DOJ.

The more he calls the media FAKE the more they will write & report. The more he insults our intelligence agencies by stating Russia is just a "ruse" the more he implicates himself into a coverup and the deeper they will dig :dig: The more he insults the DOJ or threatens with firings (Robert Mueller) the more they will leak.

Now you know why this story was leaked just last week.
Analysis | Why Jeff Sessions’s testimony on Russia is so important

They're going to take Trump down, and many are betting he won't last until the end of this year.




In this 8 minute video of February--Smith explains that Trump surrogates were not only on the phone with the Russian Ambassador but with Russian intelligence agents including the day that DNC database were getting hacked into.

 
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years


Keep in mind, that the maps were brought to you by the Gallup polling organization.

Gallup is the most pro-GOP of any of the pollsters. They get paid to shill for the GOP.

Hence, your panic.

What "panic"? Hillary is still not President, isn't she?

My investments are kicking ass, my property value is going up while my property taxes are down, I have a glut of guns and ammunition left over from the Obama years, we have a new conservative Supreme Court Justice and will probably get a couple more, ISIS is being methodically wiped off the face of this planet, all the racial unrest of the Obama era seems to have disappeared, we haven't had a terrorist attack on our soil since Trump was elected, my fridge is stocked full of ice cold beer, and we're going to throw something on the grill this afternoon.

No panic here. :banana:


Republicans have 2 options

1. Remove Trump from office asap or
2. Burn down the entire party in 2018--2020--& beyond

If Republicans can do 8 investigations into Benghazi, it's not hard to imagine what Democrats will do with Treason, Obstruction & Lies when they take over in 2018. You'll also get a great education into what that Emoluments clause in the Constitution is all about--which is also impeachable if Democrats don't agree to the current setup.
Two plaintiffs join suit against Trump, alleging breach of emoluments clause
The Array of Conflicts of Interest Facing the Trump Presidency
Hillary
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years
Trump won the popular vote.
Jesus would tell you to stop that nonsense.
Trump would whip Jesus's ass in Miss. Just saying.

Assuming the dems find a non-toxic nominee (and I'm not sure Kamilla Harris fits the bill), running against Trump may be enough, especially if the gop makes a much a muck of healthcare and the Turtle is going for by not aiming for some bipartisan compromise. But, those underemployed white former union folks in the Rust Belt aren't just coming back to the Dems because of Trump, even if Trump breaks every promise he made, and he probably will.

The dems have to win all three of Pa, Mich and Wisc or Fla and at least one of those. Trump may well go off for his media career and let Pence run.

Trump is done already.

There has never been a President in this nation's history that was so naive and frankly stupid enough to make enemies out of the 3 most powerful agencies in this country. The media, our intelligence agencies and the DOJ.....

Yadda yadda...meow meow...woof woof...

07-minister.jpg
 
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years


Keep in mind, that the maps were brought to you by the Gallup polling organization.

Gallup is the most pro-GOP of any of the pollsters. They get paid to shill for the GOP.

Hence, your panic.

What "panic"? Hillary is still not President, isn't she?

My investments are kicking ass, my property value is going up while my property taxes are down, I have a glut of guns and ammunition left over from the Obama years, we have a new conservative Supreme Court Justice and will probably get a couple more, ISIS is being methodically wiped off the face of this planet, all the racial unrest of the Obama era seems to have disappeared, we haven't had a terrorist attack on our soil since Trump was elected, my fridge is stocked full of ice cold beer, and we're going to throw something on the grill this afternoon.

No panic here. :banana:


Republicans have 2 options

1. Remove Trump from office asap or
2. Burn down the entire party in 2018--2020--& beyond

If Republicans can do 8 investigations into Benghazi, it's not hard to imagine what Democrats will do with Treason, Obstruction & Lies when they take over in 2018. You'll also get a great education into what that Emoluments clause in the Constitution is all about--which is also impeachable if Democrats don't agree to the current setup.
Two plaintiffs join suit against Trump, alleging breach of emoluments clause
The Array of Conflicts of Interest Facing the Trump Presidency
Hillary
This is interesting

imrs.php


Donald Trump eked his way into the White House last fall on the strength of 78,000 votes in three states. He lost the popular vote by about two percentage points, earning the support of just under 46 percent of voters who cast a ballot. Since Nov. 8, polling has consistently shown that an even smaller percentage of the country thinks the president is doing a good job. The most recent weekly approval rating average from Gallup, for example, has Trump at 39 percent approval — seven percentage points lower than the support he got at the ballot box. On Monday, Gallup offered a more detailed set of data. Using interviews conducted over Trump’s first six months in office — during which his approval slipped slightly nationally — Gallup determined the average approval in each of the 50 states.

Unsurprisingly, those states that view Trump positively are also among those that supported him the most during last year’s election. Some states stick out, though: Texas, where Trump is viewed net negatively; and Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, the three states that gave him that crucial 78,000-vote margin of victory. If Trump were to win only states where he had at least 50 percent approval in the first six months of this year, he’d end up with 99 electoral votes out of the 270 needed to win the presidency. (As we’ve seen so often before, not many people live in the big states Trump won in 2016.) If he won those where he’s at 45 percent or more? He’d snag 154 electoral votes. In the three states that gave Trump his 78,000-vote electoral college victory, he’s at 43 percent (Pennsylvania and Wisconsin) and 42 percent (Michigan) approval. If he hopes to repeat his victories in those states, Trump will need to see much better numbers in three years’ time.

imrs.php

This chart shows his demise over the last 6 months.
Analysis | In 47 states, a smaller part of the population now approves of Trump than voted for him

Trump Has Lowest Six-Month Approval Rating of Any U.S. President in 70 Years
Trump won the popular vote.
Jesus would tell you to stop that nonsense.
Trump would whip Jesus's ass in Miss. Just saying.

Assuming the dems find a non-toxic nominee (and I'm not sure Kamilla Harris fits the bill), running against Trump may be enough, especially if the gop makes a much a muck of healthcare and the Turtle is going for by not aiming for some bipartisan compromise. But, those underemployed white former union folks in the Rust Belt aren't just coming back to the Dems because of Trump, even if Trump breaks every promise he made, and he probably will.

The dems have to win all three of Pa, Mich and Wisc or Fla and at least one of those. Trump may well go off for his media career and let Pence run.

Trump is done already.

There has never been a President in this nation's history that was so naive and frankly stupid enough to make enemies out of the 3 most powerful agencies in this country. The media, our intelligence agencies and the DOJ.

The more he calls the media FAKE the more they will write & report. The more he insults our intelligence agencies by stating Russia is just a "ruse" the more he implicates himself into a coverup and the deeper they will dig :dig: The more he insults the DOJ or threatens with firings (Robert Mueller) the more they will leak.

Now you know why this story was leaked just last week.
Analysis | Why Jeff Sessions’s testimony on Russia is so important

They're going to take Trump down, and many are betting he won't last until the end of this year.




In this 8 minute video of February--Smith explains that Trump surrogates were not only on the phone with the Russian Ambassador but with Russian intelligence agents including the day that DNC database were getting hacked into.



The dems problems extend past Trump. The gop is probably better off strategically if there is some way for Trump to be removed without the gop establishment being seen as the remover.

As I see Schumer's gambit, the new dem plan is basically going to be run on Trump's economic populism of infrastructure and bringing back jobs that no longer exist anywhere.
 
Hint: Clinton is gone, yet Trump cannot govern effectively. Sessions says he is not quitting, the Senate thumbed its collective nose at Trump, while Wray and Mueller have made it clear they will kick administration heinie if Trump tries to dismiss Mueller.
Hint: I'm glad that she is gone & that is a far better outcome than a stagnant government.
If that were all that it is, sure, but Trump is a pathological defunct who threatens us all.
Hysterics The economy & markets say otherwise.
Yes, 'hysteric' well defines the Trumpers. The economy and markets were doing quite well in Germany by 1936 and 1937 under the pathological defunct.
And there it is, the "I'm a fucking nutjob" tip off.
You said we could say Trump is doing good because of the markets. I gave you a comparison that blew up your suggestion.
 
Keep in mind, that the maps were brought to you by the Gallup polling organization.

Gallup is the most pro-GOP of any of the pollsters. They get paid to shill for the GOP.

Hence, your panic.

What "panic"? Hillary is still not President, isn't she?

My investments are kicking ass, my property value is going up while my property taxes are down, I have a glut of guns and ammunition left over from the Obama years, we have a new conservative Supreme Court Justice and will probably get a couple more, ISIS is being methodically wiped off the face of this planet, all the racial unrest of the Obama era seems to have disappeared, we haven't had a terrorist attack on our soil since Trump was elected, my fridge is stocked full of ice cold beer, and we're going to throw something on the grill this afternoon.

No panic here. :banana:


Republicans have 2 options

1. Remove Trump from office asap or
2. Burn down the entire party in 2018--2020--& beyond

If Republicans can do 8 investigations into Benghazi, it's not hard to imagine what Democrats will do with Treason, Obstruction & Lies when they take over in 2018. You'll also get a great education into what that Emoluments clause in the Constitution is all about--which is also impeachable if Democrats don't agree to the current setup.
Two plaintiffs join suit against Trump, alleging breach of emoluments clause
The Array of Conflicts of Interest Facing the Trump Presidency
That is the truth.
 

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