Biden’s national approval rating hits the lowest in Iowa of any President in history.

Biden’s national approval rating hits the lowest in Iowa of any President in history.

According to a somber new Quinnipiac poll, more Americans are dissatisfied with President Biden’s performance than at any other time throughout his reign.

Only 31% of Americans think they are satisfied with the way Biden is handling the presidency, while 60% are not.

33 percent of those who are registered to vote approved, while 59 percent disapproved.

The poor popularity rating was bad news for Biden’s chances in 2024.

A staggering 71 percent of Americans, including a majority of Democrats (54 percent), do not want to see Biden run for office again in 2024.

Only 24% of voters do support Biden’s candidacy for reelection. Democrats expressed interest in him running for office to the tune of 40%.

The results contrast with Republican support for Donald Trump: 69 percent of Republicans indicated they want him to run again in 2024, while only 27 percent said they would not.

‘Of all Americans, 60% stated they didn’t want Trump to be the Republican nominee.

The first state in the union to have its caucuses is traditionally regarded as a reliable sign of how a candidate will perform on a national level, but things are looking worse for Biden there.

According to a recent Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll, only 23% of Iowans believe that Biden should run for office again in 2024, while 76% believe that he shouldn’t. In Iowa, 32% of people believe Trump should run again.

Even less popular with voters was Vice President Kamala Harris, who would generally replace Biden as the Democratic nominee in the event of his withdrawal.

Only 26% of respondents thought Harris would make a good candidate in 2024.

According to Tim Malloy, a polling expert at Quinnipiac University, “there is limited appetite for a rerun of either a Trump or Biden presidency.”

But while Trump still has backing from his supporters, President Biden is losing ground with members of his own party.

According to the Quinnipiac survey, where 23 percent of respondents approved and 68 percent disapproved, Republicans in Congress fared even worse than Biden.

Democrats were polling at a negative 30 to 63 percent approval rating, but it’s worth noting that the Supreme Court’s approval rating was higher than both at 37 percent to 56 percent.

Despite public assurances that he will still be capable of carrying out the job at the age of 82 in 2024, Biden has declared that he intends to run for president again.

In an unintentional gaffe on Wednesday, Biden caused controversy by disclosing that he had cancer.

The president talked about how pollution promotes cancer.

That is why I have cancer, along with so many many other folks I grew up with, he remarked.

Before he was elected president, Biden had four non-melanoma skin tumors removed.

However, the largest burden on the Biden White House may still be inflation.

With unemployment at a 40-year high of 9.1 percent, many families are being priced out of daily living, with two-thirds of Americans reporting that they have been forced to reduce their spending on restaurants and entertainment.

Economists worry that a recession is on the horizon as the Fed strives to tighten monetary policy and control prices.

The Quinnipiac poll gave Biden his highest ratings for handling the coronavirus, at 50%, and his lowest ratings for the economy, at 28%.

The response rate for how he handled the conflict between Russia and Ukraine was 40%, and the response rate for how he handled gun violence was 32%.

In spite of forecasts of a red wave in the upcoming midterm elections, a total of 44% of respondents said they wanted Republicans to take the House in November while only 45% wanted Democrats to keep it.

In the Senate, Republicans should retain control, according to 46% of voters, while Democrats want to keep it.

Democrats presently control a majority in the House, while Harris’s tie-breaking vote in the Senate broke a deadlock.

The majority of bills still require 10 Republican votes to pass both chambers and become law.