Polls and Support For Trump a political figure so divisive - Americans view him more negatively than any other president in the last 70 years

We know people here are on record announcing their faith in polls. Take polls on Greenland for instance -- or not.

Support for Trump’s Policies Exceeds Support for Trump​

A new poll found the public is sympathetic to the president-elect’s plans to deport migrants and reduce America’s presence overseas.

Many Americans who otherwise dislike President-elect Donald J. Trump share his bleak assessment of the country’s problems and support some of his most contentious prescriptions to fix them, according to a new poll from The New York Times and Ipsos.
A little more than half of the country expresses some desire to see Mr. Trump follow through with his harshest threat to deal with illegal immigration: deporting everyone living in the United States without authorization.


Note: The gray segment refers to the share of adults who did not respond or said they didn’t know. Democrats and Republicans include those who identified with or leaned toward each party. - Based on a poll by The New York Times and Ipsos of 2,128 U.S. adults conducted from Jan. 2 to 10.
By June Kim



The poll, which surveyed 2,128 adults from Jan. 2 to 10, found that 55 percent of Americans either strongly or somewhat support such mass deportations.

The poll tells the story of a country turning inward, where people are more aligned with Mr. Trump’s “America First” agenda than they were during his first term in office.
For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years — the level of support for his ideas is striking. Most Americans say the United States has ignored serious problems at home while entangling itself in costly conflicts abroad, the poll found. A majority believe the government is sending too much money to Ukraine. And many are expressing less tolerance of immigrants overall.
“Something needs to happen on immigration,” said Jose Hernandez, 48, of Atlanta, who works with a hotel chain on new projects. “I’m an immigrant myself, from Mexico, but I waited 25 years. I came to this country legally.” He added, “There’s no control over the system.”
note: For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years

Gotta hand it to him. Ttump loves to be agreed with.

note: "President-elect Donald J. Trump" not President Donald J. Trump
:auiqs.jpg::auiqs.jpg::auiqs.jpg::auiqs.jpg::auiqs.jpg:

 
We know people here are on record announcing their faith in polls. Take polls on Greenland for instance -- or not.

Support for Trump’s Policies Exceeds Support for Trump​

A new poll found the public is sympathetic to the president-elect’s plans to deport migrants and reduce America’s presence overseas.

Many Americans who otherwise dislike President-elect Donald J. Trump share his bleak assessment of the country’s problems and support some of his most contentious prescriptions to fix them, according to a new poll from The New York Times and Ipsos.
A little more than half of the country expresses some desire to see Mr. Trump follow through with his harshest threat to deal with illegal immigration: deporting everyone living in the United States without authorization.


Note: The gray segment refers to the share of adults who did not respond or said they didn’t know. Democrats and Republicans include those who identified with or leaned toward each party. - Based on a poll by The New York Times and Ipsos of 2,128 U.S. adults conducted from Jan. 2 to 10.
By June Kim



The poll, which surveyed 2,128 adults from Jan. 2 to 10, found that 55 percent of Americans either strongly or somewhat support such mass deportations.

The poll tells the story of a country turning inward, where people are more aligned with Mr. Trump’s “America First” agenda than they were during his first term in office.
For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years — the level of support for his ideas is striking. Most Americans say the United States has ignored serious problems at home while entangling itself in costly conflicts abroad, the poll found. A majority believe the government is sending too much money to Ukraine. And many are expressing less tolerance of immigrants overall.
“Something needs to happen on immigration,” said Jose Hernandez, 48, of Atlanta, who works with a hotel chain on new projects. “I’m an immigrant myself, from Mexico, but I waited 25 years. I came to this country legally.” He added, “There’s no control over the system.”
note: For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years

Gotta hand it to him. Ttump loves to be agreed with.

note: "President-elect Donald J. Trump" not President Donald J. Trump
It is democrats who are actually divisive. They make it racism about everything. Hillary Clinton called Trump supporters deplorables. Biden called them garbage. It was leftists who kicked family members out of Thanksgiving celebrations, just because parts of their family voted for Trump. I didn't hear anything from Trump supporters that they would kick family members out of Thanksgiving just because they voted for Harris. It is Michelle Obama who claimed that your side "goes high" and yet wouldn't even go to the funeral of former democrat president Jimmy Carter, just because Trump was there.
 
It is democrats who are actually divisive
Disqualification Alert!

reason: imbecility on steroids

Trump Christmas Message Was Basically a Villain Monologue


‘Go to Hell,’ ‘The Light of Freedom’ and Other Ways to Send Presidential Christmas Messages​

Past U.S. presidents have used their holiday messages to inspire the nation to face hard times by coming together. President-elect Donald J. Trump had his own idea.

Franklin D. Roosevelt: “We set our faith in human love.”​

On Dec. 24, 1941, just over two weeks after the attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt acknowledged that many Americans might be asking how they could celebrate Christmas “in a world at war, a world of fighting and suffering and death?”
Standing alongside Winston Churchill, he said the answer was clear. “Our strongest weapon in this war is that conviction of the dignity and brotherhood of man which Christmas Day signifies — more than any other day or any other symbol,” the president said, according to The American Presidency Project at the University of California-Santa Barbara.


“Against enemies who preach the principles of hate and practice them,” he said, “we set our faith in human love and in God’s care for us and all men everywhere.”

Calvin Coolidge: “The great sacrifice in defense of our ideals.”​

On Dec. 24, 1923, President Calvin Coolidge lit the first national Christmas tree on the Ellipse, south of the White House, pressing a button that illuminated 2,500 electric lightbulbs, according to the White House Historical Association. He also sent a reassuring message to disabled American veterans of World War I, which had ended five years earlier.

“The heart of America is with those who made the great sacrifice in defense of our ideals,” he said. “Whether you continue in the hospitals fighting for recovery or are battling to reestablish yourself in civil pursuits, the nation will be mindful of its obligations to those so honorably stricken.”

Richard M. Nixon: “The spirit of Christmas is not measured by the number of lights on a tree.”​

On Dec. 14, 1973, President Richard M. Nixon noted that, instead of many lights, there would be only a single illuminated star on the national Christmas tree, as the United States faced an energy crisis.

“And in a way, I suppose one could say with only one light on the tree, this will be a very dreary Christmas, but we know that isn’t true, because the spirit of Christmas is not measured by the number of lights on a tree,” he said. “The spirit of Christmas is measured by the love that each of us has in his heart for his family, for his friends, for his fellow Americans, and for people all over the world.”

Nixon also noted that it was the first time in eight years “when no American prisoner of war is away from home at Christmas.”

Ronald Reagan: “The light of freedom is not going to be extinguished.”​

President Ronald Reagan’s first Christmas address in office came in 1981 as the American economy had entered a recession and tensions overseas were running high.

“Over the past year, we’ve begun the long, hard work of economic recovery,” he said. “Our goal is an America in which every citizen who needs and wants a job can get a job.”

Poland had recently declared martial law, and Mr. Reagan used his Christmas message to not only ask for faith in the United States, but to also warn about the threat posed by the Soviet Union.

“The Soviet Union, through its threats and pressures, deserves a major share of blame for the developments in Poland,” he said.



“Once, earlier in this century, an evil influence threatened that the lights were going out all over the world,” he added. “Let the light of millions of candles in American homes give notice that the light of freedom is not going to be extinguished.”
Image
Michelle Obama and Barack Obama, both smiling and wearing winter coats, sit close together.

Barack Obama: “The spirit that binds us together.”​

President Barack Obama would routinely post a Christmas video with his wife, Michelle, in which the two would lightly banter and then speak of national unity.

In their 2015 video, the president spoke of what he saw as values synonymous with the Christmas spirit. “Treating one another with love and compassion,” he said. “Caring for those on society’s margins.” He urged Americans to view their lives through that lens.
“That’s the spirit that binds us together,” Mr. Obama said. “Not just as Christians, but as Americans of all faiths. It’s what the holidays are about: coming together as one American family to celebrate our blessings and the values we hold dear.”



Joe Biden: “Really look at each other, not as Democrats or Republicans.”​

Several hours before Mr. Trump posted his Christmas message this year, President Biden offered his own valedictory holiday greeting.
“For the last time as your president, it’s my honor to wish all of America a very Merry Christmas,” he posted on X. “My hope for our nation, today and always, is that we continue to seek the light of liberty and love, kindness and compassion, dignity and decency.”
Mr. Biden’s previous holiday messages have also urged hope and asked for American resolve. In 2022, when the country was reeling from the deaths and economic losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic, his Christmas address asked Americans to find a “stillness” at the heart of the holiday.

“The pandemic has taken so much from us,” Mr. Biden said. “We’ve lost so much time with one another. We’ve lost so many people — people we loved.”

“Really look at each other,” he continued, “not as Democrats or Republicans, not as members of ‘Team Red’ or ‘Team Blue,’ but as who we really are: fellow Americans.”
 
Yeah the polls missed bigly last November
 
Yeah the polls missed bigly last November
again, being stupid where polls are concerned is ...

Many polls most polls gave Trump chances to win. No polls I know of said Trump would lose. That's not how polls work. People reading polls often make silly predictions posing as facts

and djt often shouts about polls he likes.
 
We know people here are on record announcing their faith in polls. Take polls on Greenland for instance -- or not.

Support for Trump’s Policies Exceeds Support for Trump​

A new poll found the public is sympathetic to the president-elect’s plans to deport migrants and reduce America’s presence overseas.

Many Americans who otherwise dislike President-elect Donald J. Trump share his bleak assessment of the country’s problems and support some of his most contentious prescriptions to fix them, according to a new poll from The New York Times and Ipsos.
A little more than half of the country expresses some desire to see Mr. Trump follow through with his harshest threat to deal with illegal immigration: deporting everyone living in the United States without authorization.


Note: The gray segment refers to the share of adults who did not respond or said they didn’t know. Democrats and Republicans include those who identified with or leaned toward each party. - Based on a poll by The New York Times and Ipsos of 2,128 U.S. adults conducted from Jan. 2 to 10.
By June Kim



The poll, which surveyed 2,128 adults from Jan. 2 to 10, found that 55 percent of Americans either strongly or somewhat support such mass deportations.

The poll tells the story of a country turning inward, where people are more aligned with Mr. Trump’s “America First” agenda than they were during his first term in office.
For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years — the level of support for his ideas is striking. Most Americans say the United States has ignored serious problems at home while entangling itself in costly conflicts abroad, the poll found. A majority believe the government is sending too much money to Ukraine. And many are expressing less tolerance of immigrants overall.
“Something needs to happen on immigration,” said Jose Hernandez, 48, of Atlanta, who works with a hotel chain on new projects. “I’m an immigrant myself, from Mexico, but I waited 25 years. I came to this country legally.” He added, “There’s no control over the system.”
note: For a political figure so divisive — Americans view him more negatively than any other president about to take office in the last 70 years

Gotta hand it to him. Ttump loves to be agreed with.

note: "President-elect Donald J. Trump" not President Donald J. Trump

Yeah You keep on trusting those polls. They had Harris winning in a landslide.
 
again, being stupid where polls are concerned is ...

Many polls most polls gave Trump chances to win. No polls I know of said Trump would lose. That's not how polls work. People reading polls often make silly predictions posing as facts

and djt often shouts about polls he likes.

Nope.... More than half of the ones I saw placed Harris out ahead of Trump two-thirds to one third.

You see Polls these days are a lot like Burger King. Have it your way... Just depends on how much you want to pay for it.
 

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