Biden’s approval rating drops to a low of 38 percent at a time, facing a potentially damaging verdict from voters in the upcoming midterm elections in November.

Another bad survey for the president shows that more than 70% of Americans do not want Joe Biden to run for reelection in 2024.

At a time when the president is potentially facing a negative vote from voters in the approaching midterm elections in November, Biden’s approval rating also hit a low of 38%.

If Republicans win the congressional majority in the upcoming elections, 79-year-old Biden will find it nearly impossible to carry out his legislative program.

According to a significant 71 percent of Americans in the Harvard CAPS/Harris poll, Biden should not seek reelection in the face of high inflation rates and rising gas prices.

When asked why they thought Biden shouldn’t run for re-election, 30% claimed it was because he was too old (81 when the election is held in 2024), while 45% said he was “a lousy president”.

60 percent of individuals surveyed indicated they had worries about Biden’s mental fitness for office, which is the majority of those who expressed worry.

Even though Biden was the front-runner in a Democratic presidential primary, only 30% of voters said they would support him.

According to Mark Penn, co-director of the Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey, told The Hill., “President Biden may wish to run again, but the people say ‘no’ to the idea of a second term and disapprove of the job he is doing as president.”

Penn continued, “Only 30% of Democrats would even cast a ballot for him in a Democratic presidential primary.”

According to 61 percent of those surveyed, Donald Trump, a former president, should not seek reelection.

According to the poll, 36% of respondents believed Trump should not run for president because he is unpredictable, 33% believed he would further divide the country, and 30% believed he was to blame for the uprising at the US Capitol on January 6.

In the meanwhile, most respondents said they would think about supporting a centrist independent presidential candidate in 2024, with 60% indicating they might back a third candidate if Biden and Trump ended up winning their parties’ nominations.

Biden’s administration has been marked by a string of errors and unanticipated challenges.

The return of the Covid-19 outbreak was rapidly followed by the failure of the U.S. exit from Afghanistan last summer, when the Taliban quickly took over the nation as the U.S.-backed regime fell.

Then, discussions over Biden’s larger domestic agenda faltered before ending completely in December.

Gas prices increased dramatically around the world in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in late February, escalating inflation to a 40-year high.

Another setback occurred last month when the Supreme Court limited the EPA’s power to control greenhouse gas emissions by overturning the constitutional right to an abortion established by Roe v. Wade.

Biden has been left striving to recapture the initiative at every turn as a suddenly reactive president, frequently with mixed results.

Congress is refusing to provide further funding to combat the pandemic, despite the coronavirus being less dangerous than before and infections having a much lower likelihood of ending in death.

After the shootings in New York and Texas, Biden signed massive gun control legislation. Now, as the conflict in Ukraine approaches its fifth month, Biden is spearheading a new investment in European security.

However, he only has a small set of tools at his disposal to address other problems like growing costs and declining access to abortion.

According to presidential historian Lindsay Chervinsky, “People are cranky.”

After a mostly fruitful first five months in office, which included a travel abroad to meet with allies eager to see a familiar face back on the global stage, Douglas Brinkley, another historian, claimed that Biden had developed a case of presidential hubris.

During the second Iraq War, he compared Vice President Joe Biden’s Fourth of July speech to President George W. Bush’s notorious “Mission Accomplished” moment.

He was attempting to share good news, but it didn’t work out for him, according to Brinkley. “All of a sudden, Biden lost a lot of respect.”

White House representatives dismiss the similarity, pointing out that in his speech in 2021, Biden issued a warning about the ‘strong’ delta variant.

A spokesman, Chris Meagher, stated that fewer people are dying from the illness than ever before, which lessens interruptions in offices and classrooms.

The president is “laser focused” on doing everything he can to ensure that the economy works for the American people,” he said.

“Fighting inflation and decreasing costs is the president’s number one economic priority.”

And we’re well-positioned to move from our unprecedented job recovery to a period of solid and consistent growth.

Because of the effort we’ve done to stop the epidemic, COVID is no longer the disruptive force it once was.