Biden enters White House with slight rise in poll numbers
Incoming president sees a modest tick up in polls; far short of Obama bounce but higher than Trump
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Newly inaugurated President Joe Biden is enjoying a modest honeymoon as he begins his tenure in the White House.
Sixty-eight percent of Americans say they approve of how Biden’s handled his presidential transition, according to a Gallup national poll conducted Jan. 4-15. That’s a slight rise from a 65% approval in Gallup’s December poll.
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Biden’s transition approval is the same as fellow Democrat Bill Clinton when he was inaugurated as president in Jan. 1993, and slightly higher than the 61% approval Republican George W. Bush had in Gallup polling when he was sworn in as president in Jan. 2001.
But Biden’s approval is far lower than the sky-high 83% transition approval Barack Obama enjoyed when he was inaugurated 12 years ago. And it towers over the 44% transition approval Donald Trump had in Gallup polling when he was inaugurated four years ago.
Biden’s also enjoying a slight tick up in his favorable ratings since his November presidential election victory.
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The new president’s favorable rating stands at 59% in the latest CNN poll, up seven points since October. Biden’s favorable rating in the Gallup survey is 57%, edging up two points since November. It stands at 50% in latest USA Today/Suffolk University survey, up a point from last month, and at 49% in an NPR/PBS/Marist poll, also up two points.
But his favorable rating stood at 44% in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, a one-point dip from October.