![]() ![]() ![]() The poll found that 20 percent of the public is still “very concerned” and 42 percent “somewhat concerned” that they or someone they know will become ill from the virus.Ībout four in 10 are not concerned. The decrease in support comes as the vaccination rate across the country is lagging and the highly infectious delta variant is now accounting for about 83 percent of all new coronavirus cases, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The drop in optimism was across all political leanings. Meanwhile, 63 percent of those polled approved specifically of Biden’s response to the coronavirus - but that’s still a 9-percentage-point drop, the survey found. The drop in optimism was across all political persuasions: down about 20 percentage points among Democrats and Republicans and 26 percentage points among independents. ![]() The ABC News/Ipsos poll - released Sunday amid the administration’s six-month mark - found that just 45 percent of Americans are optimistic about where the country is heading over the next year, down from the 64 percent this past spring.Ĭonversely, 55 percent of respondents in the new poll say they are pessimistic about the direction of the country, an increase from the 36 percent who said the same thing in the previous survey. Joe Biden and fellow Democrats are bullying job creators to boost unionsĪmericans’ optimism about the direction of the country has plunged nearly 20 percentage points since late April - with President Biden taking a beating over COVID-19, crime and the border, a new poll shows. Liberal media bends over backward to dismiss new Joe Biden revelations Hunter Biden seeks approval from his dad Joe and fears ‘he’ll never be as good as his brother’ Beau: ex-stripper The survey’s overall sampling error is plus or minus three percentage points.Biden to block uranium mining on 1M acres around Grand Canyon: report The CNN poll was conducted by ORC International, from April 5-7, with 1,012 adults nationwide questioned by telephone. Those between 18 and 34 are the most likely to be optimistic, with 60% things are going well. For more of the next four years, the figure hovered in the 20’s and 30’s, and stayed mostly in the 30’s and 40’s last year.īreaking down the new 50% number further, senior citizens and rural Americans are those least likely to give a thumbs-up to current conditions. That quickly fell to 48% by April of that same year. Nevertheless, Americans haven’t been this optimistic since January 2007, when 57% felt the country was in good shape. The unemployment rate still slipped to 7.6%, according to a Labor Department report released last week, but that’s because nearly 500,000 people dropped out of the labor market. While Wall Street shows positive growth, last month’s unemployment numbers showed hiring slowed sharply in March, with the economy adding only 88,000 jobs, the lowest monthly gain since last June. “The number continues an upward pattern since the summer of last year, when only 35% were optimistic about the country’s conditions,” said CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. The CNN/ORC International poll released Friday indicates that an equal 50% say the country is in bad shape. (CNN) – As the stock market continues to show record highs, the number of Americans who say things are going well in the country has reached 50% for the first time in more than six years, according to a new national survey.īut that doesn’t mean the country is entirely out of the woods yet. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. ![]()
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