Support for impeaching Trump already at Nixon-era levels
With scandals and disasters too numerous to mention, Donald Trump’s nascent presidency is the very definition of embattled. And according to a new poll from Public Policy Polling, the short two weeks of Trump’s reign have taken a drastic toll on his already-dismal popularity. He has a historically low Gallup approval rating for a president […]

With scandals and disasters too numerous to mention, Donald Trump’s nascent presidency is the very definition of embattled. And according to a new poll from Public Policy Polling, the short two weeks of Trump’s reign have taken a drastic toll on his already-dismal popularity.
He has a historically low Gallup approval rating for a president this early in his administration, and moreover, PPP finds that a majority of Americans are not opposed to impeaching Trump:
Less than 2 weeks into Donald Trump’s tenure as President, 40 percent of voters already want to impeach him. That’s up from 35 percent of voters who wanted to impeach him a week ago. Only 48 percent of voters say that they would be opposed to Trump’s impeachment.
There is a sharp partisan divide, but the 40 percent who favor impeachment include 10 percent of Republicans and 38 percent of independent voters, which is higher than President George W. Bush’s entire two terms, where support for impeachment over Iraq WMD’s peaked at 36 percent. Despite virulent and persistent opposition, support for impeaching President Obama peaked at 29 percent, and for President Bill Clinton, who actually was impeached, it peaked at 40 percent, but 60 percent agreed with the decision not to remove him from office.
But to really understand the depths of Trump’s historic unpopularity, you have to go all the way back to disgraced President Richard Nixon. As this chart from The Pew Research Center demonstrates, support for Nixon’s impeachment didn’t reach 40 percent until months after the televised Watergate hearings and the Saturday Night Massacre that Trump recently emulated:
[media-credit name=”Pew Research Center” align=”alignnone” width=”640″][/media-credit]
Support for Nixon’s impeachment reached 44 percent in May of 1974, after Nixon’s televised defense of his refusal to surrender evidence in the Watergate probe, and just three months before he would resign.
Trump faces the possibility of impeachment on multiple grounds, and these results demonstrate that if anything develops with regard to Trump’s Russia ties or business conflicts, the American public stands ready to watch him leave office in disgrace — much more so than they cared to watch him assume it.
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