In Biden's first year, American sentiments made historic shift to right
Newly released polling shows that America has undergone a major political shift in the past year amid economic challenges, the ongoing pandemic and a series of bills and mandates out of Washington, D.C. Gallup released polling showing that during 2021, millions of
Newly released polling shows that America has undergone a major political shift in the past year amid economic challenges, the ongoing pandemic and a series of bills and mandates out of Washington, D.C.
Gallup released polling showing that during 2021, millions of Americans switched from an affiliation with the Democratic party to the Republican party. Gallup reports "a nine-percentage-point Democratic advantage in the first quarter to a rare five-point Republican edge in the fourth quarter.
"Both the nine-point Democratic advantage in the first quarter and the five-point Republican edge in the fourth quarter are among the largest Gallup has measured for each party in any quarter since it began regularly measuring party identification and leaning in 1991," Gallup said.
Even after the shift, though, 46% of Americans still identify with the Democratic party, compared to 43% with the Republican party.
Gallup laid out how those numbers have changed over recent months.
"Democrat Joe Biden enjoyed relatively high ratings after taking office on Jan. 20, and his approval stayed high through the early summer as COVID-19 infections dramatically decreased after millions of Americans got vaccinated against the disease," Gallup said. "A summer surge of infections tied to the delta variant of the coronavirus made it clear the pandemic was not over in the U.S., and Biden's approval ratings began to sag. Later, the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan caused Biden's ratings to fall further, into the low 40s.
"His ratings remain low as the U.S. battles rising inflation and yet another surge of COVID-19 infections, tied to the omicron variant of the virus," Gallup added.
Gallup collected the results by aggregating 2021 data from 12,000 randomly sampled U.S. adults.
The Gallup poll comes just days after a different poll showed a new low for President Joe Biden's job approval numbers.
Quinnipiac released new polling last week showing that surveyed Americans gave Biden a job approval rating of 33%. In that poll, Biden received poor marks on the economy, foreign policy and COVID-19 policy.
Inflation and job market issues have plagued the Biden administration. On the economy, Quinnipiac found 34% of those surveyed approve of Biden's work while 57% disapprove. The same poll reports that 35% approve of Biden's job on foreign policy, while 54% disapprove.
The poll also found 39% approve of Biden’s work on the pandemic, while 55% disapprove.
Even among Biden's own party, he has lost a measure of support.
"Among Democrats in today's poll, 75 percent approve, 14 percent disapprove and 11 percent did not offer an opinion," Quinnipiac said. "Among Democrats in November's poll, 87 percent approved, 7 percent disapproved and 6 percent did not offer an opinion."