The poll, however, showed “mixed signals,” according to Tim Mallow, an analyst at this private university in Connecticut.
Mallow specified that 57% of Americans do not want Trump back in the White House, but almost half of respondents believe that a Republican second term is likely.
In addition, 88% of Democrats and 58% of independent voters believe that the return of Trump (2017-2021) will be bad for the country, while 62% of Republicans believe that it will be good.
Additionally, 55% of Americans believe that Trump has had a mostly negative impact on the Republican Party, but among Republicans, 70% believe it has been positive.
Approximately 35% of Americans support Make America Great Again (MAGA), the iconic slogan of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign, and this sympathy among Republicans reaches 79%.
However, a Quinniapac poll showed that with almost two years left before the next presidential election, voters are not particularly enthusiastic about any of the potential candidates.
A similar discrepancy was found in the poll when it comes to the Democratic Party and incumbent President Joe Biden: 68% of all voters do not want Biden to run for re-election, compared to 51% of Democrats who want him to be the nominee.
Biden has 38% positive and 52% negative opinions, while Trump has 37% for and 54% against.
This poll polled 1,589 adults across the country, including 1,402 registered voters, from November 16 to 20, and the result has a margin of error of 2.5 points.
Another U.S. poll pointed to former President Donald Trump as the biggest loser in the recent midterm elections, in which he openly endorsed some of the more conservative GOP candidates and was defeated.
According to a demographic survey conducted by the Harvard CAPS-Harris Center exclusively for The Hill newspaper, 20% of respondents believe that Trump was the biggest loser in the November 8 election. Behind him with 15% is the entire Democratic Party.
Similarly, the candidates most closely associated with Trump, known as “MAGA Republicans”, are also considered the biggest losers by 14% of respondents.
Also, 12% of respondents called a group of Republican candidates the big disappointment of the evening. 23%, however, admitted that they did not have a clear position and chose not to choose any of the options.
“Trump comes out of the election a much weaker candidate for re-election than he was before the re-election,” poll co-director Mark Penn said, noting that the former president had declared his support for a group of “losing candidates.” “.
The midterm elections were held on November 8 and resulted in the retention of the majority of the Democratic Party in the Senate, which is an unexpected result, especially for some Republicans, who, despite having managed to control the House of Representatives, did not testify to the “red wave”. (party color) that Trump predicted.