President Trump’s approval rating has fallen to its lowest point yet in polling from Marquette University Law School, released Wednesday.
The September survey found 43 percent approval and 57 percent disapproval, marking Trump’s weakest showing this year. His approval stood at 48 percent at the start of his second term, slipped to 46 percent in March, then 45 percent in July before reaching 43 percent last month. Disapproval climbed from 52 percent in January to 57 percent.
Support declined across party lines. Among Republicans, 81 percent approved in September, down from 89 percent in January. Approval among independents dropped from 37 percent to 27 percent, while Democratic approval remained low, falling to 8 percent.
Trump’s strongest marks came on border security, where 55 percent approved, and on his response to the assassination of Charlie Kirk, where 53 percent approved. However, he received high disapproval ratings on inflation (71 percent), the Jeffrey Epstein case (72 percent), and foreign conflicts, including Russia-Ukraine (67 percent disapproval) and Israel-Hamas (66 percent disapproval).
The findings align with a New York Times/Siena poll earlier in the week and a YouGov/Economist survey that placed Trump’s approval at 39 percent. Marquette’s poll surveyed 1,043 adults from Sept. 12–15 with a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points.
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