Biden's approach is indistinguishable from Trump's. His plan is to claim credit for Trump's vaccine.
At this point Trumps approval rating is higher than Biden's
Your fanatical religious fervor makes the ignominious pratfall of your Cry Baby idol an occasion of great vexation, I'm sure, but empirical reality does not kowtow to emotional zealotry.
Back in reality,
Biden's approval level is 53.8%, disapproval 35.8%.
ABC News is your trusted source on political news stories and videos. Get the latest coverage and analysis on everything from the Trump presidency, Senate, House and Supreme Court.
projects.fivethirtyeight.com
Petty, pissy Loser skulked away brooding and sniveling:
Trump approval: 34%, 62% disapproval.
www.presidency.ucsb.edu
Before you are consumed your mindless rage and lash out at decent Americans, consider the validity of this thread's thesis:
The Biden scheme to maintain popular approval is "Do what Americans support!"
Biden’s Policies Are Popular. What Does That Mean for Republicans?
Polls show that on issues like a stimulus bill, climate change and immigration, most Americans support the president’s plans. Torn by infighting, the G.O.P. is still figuring out its lines of attack.
The American public has given President Biden favorable reviews since he took office last month, and the policies that he is hurrying to put in place appear broadly popular, according to polls.
And notably, as he signs a wave of executive actions and pushes a major $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill, Mr. Biden is facing muted opposition from Republicans so far — a reflection of the party’s weakened position as it juggles two increasingly divided factions.
“I think that Republicans have found Biden to be much more progressive than they thought he was going to be, but I think we’re too busy trying to kill each other to really focus on it,” said Sarah Chamberlain, the president of the Republican Main Street Partnership, a group of centrist Republicans that includes more than 60 members of the House and Senate.
This week, the House’s G.O.P. caucus met to discuss the fate of two lawmakers representing opposite ends of the party’s identity...
This intra-party division gives Mr. Biden the “upper hand” as he pushes his legislative agenda forward, said Doug Schwartz, the director of polling at Quinnipiac University, which released a nationwide poll on Wednesday. “He’s advocating policies that have solid support in the public, so Republicans are in more of a defensive posture, as they’re opposing popular policies,” Mr. Schwartz said.
[O]ptimism is on the rise, and many are attaching their hopes to the new president. When asked about the coming four years under Mr. Biden, 61 percent of Americans described themselves as optimistic...
The Quinnipiac survey found that
more than two-thirds of Americans supported Mr. Biden’s coronavirus relief package, with
wide majorities also backing certain key elements — including a permanent increase to a $15 minimum wage and a round of $1,400 stimulus checks to individuals. On the question of the stimulus payments, even 64 percent of Republicans supported them.
On a range of other Biden policies, the poll found widespread support: rejoining the Paris climate accord, opening a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants and ending Mr. Trump’s ban on travel from some predominantly Muslim countries.
Polls show that on issues like a stimulus bill, climate change and immigration, most Americans support the president’s plans. Torn by infighting, the G.O.P. is still figuring out its lines of attack.
www.nytimes.com
All patriotic Americans unite in hoping that Biden succeeds, of course, and such monumental challenges are formidable, but the upsurge in national confidence is encouraging.