It's Fight Night in New York
FIFA President Revealed Who His Special Guest Will Be for the Final. The...
It's Happening: New DNI Chief Preps Mass Firings
Zohran Mamdani Just Said This About What Should Happen to ICE
Leftist Empathy Is Not a Superpower
America's Favorite World Cup Fan Just Got an Incredible Dinner Invitation
This Interview Shows Why We Despite the Leftist Media
James Talarico Says He's Inspired by This 'TransQueer Latinx' Theologian, and That'll Play...
Republicans Hang On
Ted Cruz: AI Must Be Driven by Free Markets and Free Speech.
Tucker Carlson Is Done With the Republican Party. Good Riddance.
These Antifa Terrorists Are Going To Be Spending Nearly 500 Years in Prison
James Talarico Drops Millions on Ad Campaign Filled With Falsehoods
Mamdani Mourns Death of Journalist Whom IDF Says Was a Hamas Terrorist
PA House Democrats Advance Bill Restricting School Choice Programs
Tipsheet

Poll: Congressional Performance Down to 5%

Poll: Congressional Performance Down to 5%

Rasmussen has the latest approval numbers for Congress, and it isn't pretty. Performance approval has been dropping and dropping, and has now hit an all time low of 5%.

Advertisement

 

Just when you think the numbers couldn’t get any worse for Congress, the end of session debacle over the payroll tax extension comes along and drives perceptions of Congress even lower.

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that just five percent (5%) of Likely Voters rate the job Congress is doing as good or excellent.  Sixty-eight percent (68%) view Congress’ job performance as poor.  (To see survey question wording, click here.)

That’s the lowest level of congressional approval ever recorded by Rasmussen Reports. However, in the larger sense, it’s just a continuation of a downward trend as the percentage who give Congress good marks has remained in single-digits since mid-April. 

A scant 1% says Congress is doing an 'excellent' job, with 4% rating Congressional performance as 'good' and an overwhelming 68% rating Congressional performance as poor. The most damning number, though, may be the 86% of respondents who say that members of Congress are more interested in their careers than in helping others.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement