Trump approval rating slips to 43 percent in Georgia: Survey
President Trump’s approval rating has slipped to 43 percent in Georgia, a new survey found. According to a survey released Wednesday by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia voters are divided over Trump’s second term. Just 43 percent of respondents approve of the job he’s done so far, with one-third of those supporters saying they “strongly” support...

President Trump’s approval rating has slipped to 43 percent in Georgia, a new survey found.
According to a survey released Wednesday by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia voters are divided over Trump’s second term.
Just 43 percent of respondents approve of the job he’s done so far, with one-third of those supporters saying they “strongly” support his agenda.
The other 55 percent of respondents disapprove of Trump’s presidency so far, with nearly two-thirds being independents and 12 percent being Republican voters, the survey found.
The survey results show voters have grown more opposed to Trump’s agenda. While his approval has fluctuated over the years in the battleground state, which he won in 2016 and 2024, his disapproval rating has jumped 10 percentage points since January.
More than half, 52 percent, of surveyed Georgia voters oppose Trump’s immigration policies, and roughly 55 percent are concerned the country is headed down the “wrong track” under Trump's leadership.
One of the biggest issues for the president is the economy.
Despite Trump's emphasis on the economy on the campaign trail, it has been of concern for many Americans after the implementation of his tariff agenda. According to the survey, 55 percent of respondents oppose his handling of the economy and 53 percent oppose tariffs on foreign goods.
The Journal-Constitution noted that it’s a sharp difference from just a few months ago, when 56 percent of respondents said they expected the economy to improve under Trump.
The survey comes as Trump has been seeing tanking approval ratings in various other polls.
The Journal-Constitution poll was conducted April 15-24 among 1,000 registered Georgia voters and has a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points.