Trump’s favorability climbs in post-election poll

A poll conducted on Tuesday revealed that President-elect Trump’s favorability increased by 6 points since he was elected earlier this month.

According to a poll conducted by Emerson College, the president-elect’s favorability rating has increased from 48 percent before the election to 54 percent after. Trump is most favored by men at 61 per cent, and women at 48 percent.

The poll showed that 59 percent of white voters view him favorably. This compares to only 28 percent among Black voters and 53 percent among Hispanics.

According to the survey, 55 percent of voters aged under 30 had a positive opinion of Trump. The poll found that Americans aged 40 and 50 viewed him most favorably with 60 percent, while Americans older than 70 rated him positively at 48 percent.

Will you join Elon, Vivek and Me?
1776 Coalition Sponsored
Will you join Elon, Vivek and Me?

I want gov’t to work for the people, so I joined the DOGE Caucus. Now that Deep State, Establishment & Liberal spenders have a target on me. Fortunately, I’ve got allies like Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy working with me in this mission. This is LTGen Jack Bergman. Please join me in the fight to make gov’t accountable to the citizens..

The poll asked Americans whether they expected the final results for the race in 2024 and found that 46 per cent of respondents were surprised to learn that Trump defeated Vice President Harris. Harris voters were 67 percent surprised, but Trump voters were 71 percent not.

The poll was conducted from November 20-22, two weeks after Election Day and during the Trump transition to the White House. The President-elect named many of his Cabinet nominees and senior staff members who will assist him in implementing his agenda.

In the poll, 37 percent of respondents said that they would vote for Harris as the Democratic nominee in 2028. 35 percent were undecided. In the meantime, 51 percent of voters were still undecided on who would be the GOP nominee for 2028. Meanwhile, 30 percent supported Vice President elect JD Vance.

The survey included 1,000 respondents and had a margin for error of plus or-minus three percentage points.