Trump's approval ticks up to 36% as price angst eases, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

President Donald Trump’s approval rating ticked a percentage point higher in recent days ‌to 36% as public dissatisfaction over the cost of living grew less intense, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll that closed on Monday, June 15.

The four-day poll gathered responses before and after Trump announced on Sunday that he and Iranian leaders had agreed to ​end a war between the two countries that had pushed gasoline prices sharply higher.

Optimism over peace ​talks between the two countries has pushed gasoline prices lower in recent weeks, ⁠though Americans are still paying roughly a dollar more per gallon at the pump than they were ​before the United States and Israel launched attacks on Iran on February 28.

Some 24% of Americans currently approve ​of Trump’s stewardship over the cost of living, up from 22% a week earlier and 20% a month ago. The share who disapprove has eased to 69% in the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll from 73% a month earlier.

It remains to be seen ​if Trump’s popularity, which has suffered even among groups core to his political base such as rural voters ​and evangelical Christians, could be turning a corner. His overall approval rating remains near the lowest levels of his political career, ‌and people ⁠still take a harsher view of his handling of the cost of living than they did of how his Democratic predecessor in office, Joe Biden, handled the issue.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, which was conducted online, gathered responses from 1,537 US adults nationwide and had a margin of error of 3 percentage points in ​either direction.

Trump started his second ​term in January 2025 ⁠with a 47% approval rating – 11 percentage points higher than his current rating – after winning the prior year’s presidential election with a promise to get persistently ​high inflation under control.

That hasn’t happened, a recent US inflation report showed, and dissatisfaction ​over rising ⁠prices could weigh on Trump’s Republican allies defending narrow congressional majorities in the November 3 midterm elections.

Some 41% of registered voters in the poll said they would vote for a Democratic candidate in their district if the congressional ⁠elections ​were held today, compared to 38% who said they would vote Republican. Another ​18% said they weren’t sure or were considering a third party. Independent voters, who could be decisive in many elections, favored Democrats ​over Republicans by 13 points, 35% to 22%.

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