A Gallup poll conducted last month found Americans ranked Biden, 82, far beneath Presidents Donald Trump, Barack Obama and George W. Bush on critical foreign and domestic policy markers — despite the lame-duck president frequently deploying superlatives ...
Americans have a dimmer view of Joe Biden’s presidency as he prepares to leave office than they did at the end of Donald Trump’s first term or Barack Obama’s second WASHINGTON ... data released this week by Gallup, which found Biden’s standing ...
As he prepares to leave public office, the American public had dimmer views of President Joe Biden than predecessors Donald Trump or Barack Obama, according to a survey ... compromised on 32% and broke 34%. A recent Gallup poll found Biden’s approval ...
President Joe Biden has a lower rating than his three White House predecessors, Donald Trump, Barack Obama, and George W. Bush -- on critical policy matters such as national defence, immigration, and federal debt, according to a recent Gallup poll.
Despite the best efforts of aides, staffers and spin doctors in the media, it appears that President Joe Biden’s legacy will be forever tarnished. A recently released […]
A majority of Americans say the nation fell behind in key areas like race relations, crime, national defense and education in the time President Joe Biden was in office.
Biden and Trump have the lowest average approval ratings out of any post-World War II presidents, according to Gallup.
Joe Biden, when he ascended to the presidency four years ago, wanted to ‘restore the soul’ of the US and prove that Donald Trump was only a footnote in the American story, but things lie blatant befor
Joe Biden is about to leave office with a series of missteps that have tainted his legacy as president, experts told Newsweek. Newsweek has contacted the White House for comment via email. Biden entered office in January 2021 with a promise to provide a sharp contrast what some perceived as a chaotic Donald Trump administration.
New surveys suggest he’ll face the same widespread public opposition in his second term that he faced in his first.
Yes, that plea came not from MLK but from Rodney King, no relation to the great civil rights leader, in May 1992 as riots erupted in Los Angeles after a mostly white jury acquitted four Los Angeles police officers of assault charges for his videotaped beating.
As we mark the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, ironically on the same day as Donald Trump’s second presidential inauguration, I am reminded of a famous quote from another King: “Can we all get along?” Yes,