We Had a Massive BREAKTHROUGH in the South Carolina Redistricting Effort
RSC Held an Event for This Reporter Who Exposed an 'Egregious' Medicare Scam...
Let’s Take Kamala Up on Her Proposal of ‘No Bad Ideas’
No One Trusts Public Health Experts Anymore, and It's All Their Fault
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 321: What Jesus Said About Food
Here Is What’s Wrong With the Republican Party
OK, So Why Do Jews Keep Voting For People Who Hate Them?
Democrat Crimes Need to Be Prosecuted, Pronto!
The Trump Administration Just Handed This Commie a Subpoena
God and the Jefferson Memorial
What Explains the Catastrophe of Seattle's Mayor Katie? Could Be Evolution
Science Is Making the Humanity of Unborn Babies Harder to Ignore
Mars Colonization and the Economic Future of SpaceX
Two Chinese Nationals Charged With Laundering Drug Money for Sinaloa Cartel and CJNG
20-30 Gunshots Reported Outside White House
Tipsheet

AP Poll: 69% of Americans Have Unfavorable View of Donald Trump

AP Poll: 69% of Americans Have Unfavorable View of Donald Trump

A new AP-GfK poll shows that nearly seven out of 10 Americans have an unfavorable opinion of current Republican front-runner Donald Trump. This number includes roughly half of Republican voters who were surveyed.

Advertisement

Seven in 10 people, including close to half of Republican voters, have an unfavorable view of Trump, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. It's an opinion shared by majorities of men and women; young and old; conservatives, moderates and liberals; and whites, Hispanics and blacks — a devastatingly broad indictment of the billionaire businessman.

Even in the South, a region where Trump has won GOP primaries decisively, close to 70 percent view him unfavorably. And among whites without a college education, one of Trump's most loyal voting blocs, 55 percent have a negative opinion.

It's almost impressive how Trump has managed to make one of the most partisan and divided populations in a long time come together united on an issue.

Trump, despite being the overall leader in terms of delegates, still has not yet cracked the 50 percent threshold in a state, although he came very close to doing this in Massachusetts.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement