Last year, meanwhile, 39% of Americans had a great deal or fair amount of trust in the federal government to handle either domestic or international affairs. The number for international affairs is the lowest in Gallup’s history of asking the question; the number for domestic affairs is among the lowest.
These trends haven’t helped Biden, whose own poll numbers have dropped significantly in recent months. Americans generally disapprove of Biden’s handling of crime, immigration, and his overall job performance. Some pollsters have cited his support for teaching critical race theory and botched withdrawal from Afghanistan as factors that have contributed to his low approval ratings.
All this could prove problematic for Democrats heading into this November’s midterm elections. In a new national survey from the Trafalgar Group, 54% of American voters prefer Republican candidates in the midterm elections, compared to 42% who prefer Democratic candidates. Inflation, immigration, and law and order were among the key issues determining voters’ decisions, according to the data.
Another factor that both could hurt Democrats and, according to experts, has contributed to the national malaise felt by many Americans is the COVID-19 pandemic. The lockdowns, pushed most ardently by Democrats and kept in place longer in blue states, were recently condemned in a study from Johns Hopkins University for imposing “enormous economic and social costs” where they were adopted.
“These costs to society must be compared to the benefits of lockdowns, which our meta-analysis has shown are marginal at best,” the Johns Hopkins researchers wrote. “Such a standard benefit-cost calculation leads to a strong conclusion: Lockdowns should be rejected out of hand as a pandemic policy instrument.”
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