President Donald Trump's approval rating is now at the lowest level of his second of two non-consecutive presidential terms, according to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday (April 21).
The six-day survey showed that just 42% of voters approved of Trump's job performance during his second term, a decrease from the 43% reported in the poll conducted three weeks prior, as well as the 47% on the day of his January 20 inauguration. Additionally, the poll showed that 83% of adult respondents said the president should obey court orders he disagrees with as his administration could face criminal contempt charges for violating a federal judge's order of Venezuelan nations he alleged were gang who had no chance of challenging their deportations.
Trump's approval rating for the first-quarter of his second term is higher than the same period in his first term, but is still lower than most presidents elected since 1952, according to a recent poll conducted by Gallup. The survey showed that Trump's average job approval rating for the first-quarter of 2025 was 45%, which is higher than his 41% average in 2017, but lower than nine other presidents elected between 1952 and 2020, as well as the 59% average of all presidents.
Last week, CNN data guru Harry Enten reported that Trump had "broken his own record" with his lowest net approval rating among independent voters during any point of his two non-consecutive presidential terms.
"Trump is 'completely underwater' & has broken his own record with the lowest net approval at this point among independents (-22 pts). His economic net approval with indies at this pt is so low (-29 pts) it has 'no historical analogy.' Most indies (66%) oppose the new tariffs," Enten wrote on his X account, along with a clip of himself explaining the numbers during a live CNN broadcast.