President Obama’s approval rating reached an all-time low Wednesday as Americans continue to feel frustrated with the leaders in Washington weeks after the government shutdown ended.
Just 42% approve of how the president is handling current situations, according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. Slightly more than half—51%—disapprove of him. He received his highest approval rating—61%—in April 2009.
Several recent factors—including widespread problems with the implementation of the health care website, issues surrounding the IRS and National Security Agency, and the debate over Syria’s chemical weapons—have affected the public’s view of the president. Thirty-seven percent currently hold a “positive” view of Democrats.
But support for the Republican party also reached an all-time low.
“I don’t see things getting any better for either side coming out of the government shutdown,” host Joe Scarborough said Thursday on Morning Joe. “Any Republicans that think they’re getting a boost by the president’s problems can look at these polls and others and see it’s just not enough to be against their guy.”
President Obama visited Boston to defend Obamacare on Wednesday, the same day U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius testified about the health care law’s website glitches.








