President Obama’s ride on a post-reelection wave may be over with a new poll showing that his approval rating has dipped to 50%. That’s a 5-point fall from January, when he was sworn in for a second term in office.
A lot has happened in the past few months since the less-than-stellar numbers were revealed in the Washington Post/ABC News poll, which came out on Wednesday. For one, the automatic, across-the-board spending cuts have gone into effect (Americans disapprove of it 53% to 39%) after Congress failed to hammer out a deal.
And now Republicans and Democrats are grappling with a new budget battle because the government is only funded through March 17. Not agreeing on a deal could mean a government shutdown.
In December, Obama’s popularity reached a high-point, with 54% of the public trusting him to deal with the economy. That confidence contrasted in the public’s trust in Republicans, which polled at 36% over the same time period. Now Obama’s advantage is just 4 points, 44% to 40%, according to the poll.
The approval rating for Dems as a whole has dipped five percentage points to 34% in the new survey. The approval rating for Republicans stayed the same at a meager 24%.
It isn’t entirely bad news, however. More Americans—47% blame the GOP for the sequester, compared to 33% who blame the president.









