Poll hits Dems with big dose of reality: It's not just Super Bowl fans cheering on Trump



The crowd at the New Orleans Superdome went wild Sunday when President Donald Trump took to the field. They erupted into applause again at the sight of their commander in chief raising a salute during the playing of "The Star-Spangled Banner."

Between Trump's reception at Super Bowl LIX and the results of the 2024 election, it is clear that the man long vilified by Democrats and their allies is genuinely popular among the American people.

Any critics still clinging to delusion and doubt on this point were dealt another blow over the weekend in the form of a CBS News/YouGov poll, which revealed that the country — especially the under-30 crowd — is majoritively behind the president.

According to the poll, which was conducted from Feb. 5 to Feb. 7, 53% of respondents signaled approval for the job Trump is doing — a figure "Face the Nation" anchor Margaret Brennan begrudgingly admitted marked the highest approval rating for Trump in a CBS News poll to date.

Some keen observers seized upon particulars in the cross tabs indicating that Trump's post-election explosion in popularity among young Americans has not dissipated.

When asked whether they approved of the way Trump was handling his job as president, 50% of respondents 65 and older, 56% of Americans ages 45 to 64, 52% of Americans ages 30 to 44, and 55% of Americans under 30 answered in the affirmative.

Trump's relatively high approval rating among members of the under-30 crowd caught the eye of CNN's politics reporter Andy Kaczynski, who said the "interesting numbers" amounted to a 10-point bump for the president.

An Economist/YouGov poll conducted from Nov. 17-19 found that 57% of respondents ages 18 to 29 said they had a favorable view of Trump — a result that Newsweek indicated marked a week-over-week net favorability increase of 19 points for Trump among members of that age cohort. An Emerson College poll released in late November similarly found that 55% of voters under 30 expressed a favorable opinion of Trump.

It appears that the grieving Democratic parents quoted in the New York Times' Jan. 19 sob piece titled "When Your Son Goes MAGA" are far from isolated cases and that Trump's popularity among young Americans was not a flash in the pan.

The CBS poll indicated further that Trump continues to enjoy far greater popularity among men, with 60% signaling approval, whereas only 47% of women said they approved of how he was handling his job as president.

'Americans are overwhelmingly positive about President Donald J. Trump's return to office.'

Regardless of whether they approved of him or not, 70% of respondents indicated that Trump was fulfilling promises made during his campaign. Among the 49% of respondents who admitted that Trump has done more than they expected he would do in his first weeks in office, 61% said the actions taken so far are mostly things they like.

To the likely chagrin of those Democrats still licking their wounds after humiliating defeats on Nov. 5, 69% of respondents described Trump as "tough"; 63% described him as "energetic"; 60% described him as "focused"; and 58% described him as "effective."

When asked about the Trump's administration's program to deport illegal aliens, 59% of respondents signaled approval. An overwhelming 64% of respondents supported Trump's deployment of American troops to the southern border.

It appears that all the attacks in the legacy media and from Democrats have done little to convince Americans to majoritively distrust the work undertaken by Elon Musk and his team at the Department of Government Efficiency.

According to the poll, 51% of respondents said Musk and DOGE should have a lot or some influence over government operations and spending. Eighteen percent of respondents said they should not have much control, and 31% of respondents said that the efficiency team that helped expose the U.S. Agency for International Development should have no influence whatsoever.

Trump's proposed tariffs are apparently less popular.

While a majority of respondents supported imposing tariffs on goods from China, 56% of respondents opposed tariffs on goods from Mexico, 60% opposed tariffs on goods from Europe, and 62% opposed tariffs on goods from Canada. Nearly three in four Americans surveyed suspect that such tariffs would lead to price increases.

The White House said in a Sunday statement obtained by The Hill, "New polling from CBS News shows Americans are overwhelmingly positive about President Donald J. Trump's return to office and his commitment to making good on his promises."

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CBS News poll that showed 85% of viewers approved of Biden's speech massively oversampled Democrats



A CBS News poll, which allegedly showed that Americans emphatically and overwhelmingly approved of President Joe Biden's first address to a joint session of Congress, comes with a major caveat: It massively oversampled Democrats.

What are the details?

The poll — which found that a whopping 85% of viewers approved of Biden's speech and came away feeling optimistic about America — was immediately shared by some Democratic lawmakers and media figures as a warning sign to Republicans.

Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell used the poll to claim, "Memo to [House and Senate Republicans]: You're woefully out of touch with those you're supposed to serve."

Shortly after the poll was shared on social media, the number 85% briefly became a trend on Twitter.

*CBS News Poll of Speech Watchers*We interviewed watchers immediately after the speech. More than eight in 10 of… https://t.co/g4lGsr4HzR

— CBS News Poll (@CBSNewsPoll) 1619665182.0

But buried near the bottom of the poll's write-up is a major caveat about the results: viewers skewed heavily Democratic.

In fact, according to CBS News, 54% of the viewers interviewed for the poll identified as Democrats, while 25% identified as independents, and only 18% identified as Republicans.

The plus-36 Democratic margin in the poll doubled the 16-plus Republican margin that CBS polled after former President Donald Trump's first joint address of Congress in 2017, and tripled the plus-12 Democratic margin that watched former President Barack Obama in 2009.

What else?

For what it's worth, some reporters at CBS News tried to make people aware of the poll's Democratic oversampling in their social media shares. But in tweets from its official page, the news outlet failed to make any mention.

When analyzing sentiment among those who tuned into speech, important to keep in mind partisan composition, which w… https://t.co/JPkQdGE9Xx

— Kabir Khanna (@kabir_here) 1619665315.0

CBS News reported that the survey was "based on 943 interviews of adults who watched the President's address to Congress on Wednesday night."

"An initial survey was conducted by YouGov between April 23-27, 2021 using a nationally representative sample of 10,420 U.S. adults, including 4,211 respondents who planned to watch the address," the outlet added. "Only those who watched the speech were included in the analysis."

Anything else?

Aside from the fact that very few Republicans watched Biden's address, ratings across the board were extremely lackluster.

Nielsen ratings found that Biden's address garnered an estimated 26.9 million viewers as measured across the 16 largest U.S. broadcast and cable news networks.

That figure paled in comparison to the number of viewers garnered by his two previous predecessors during their first addresses. In 2017, Trump garnered 48 million viewers and in 2009, Obama garnered 52.3 million viewers.