A couple of weeks after Donald Trump’s election victory, CBS News released the results of an unexpected national poll. The survey, conducted by the network and YouGov, found that 59% of Americans approved of the Republican president-elect’s transition process — a surprisingly high number for a candidate who didn’t quite reach 50% of the popular vote two weeks earlier.
It was not, however, the only recent poll on Trump’s post-election transition. The latest Marist poll, for example, found that 47% of the public approves of the Republican’s post-election efforts, which dovetailed with the results of the latest national survey from CNN. The network reported:
Most Americans expect President-elect Donald Trump to do a good job upon his return to the White House next month (54%) and a majority approves of how he’s handling the presidential transition so far (55%), according to a new CNN Poll conducted by SSRS.
At first blush, this might seem bizarre given the shambolic state of the incoming president’s transition process, which has suffered a series of embarrassing setbacks. Indeed, Trump’s first choice for attorney general was forced to withdraw in the face of bipartisan opposition; his first choice to lead the Drug Enforcement Administration was pushed out after just three days; and the Republican demoted his choice for White House counsel before he even started.
Meanwhile, the Republican has chosen highly controversial and manifestly unqualified people for a variety of powerful positions — the Pentagon, the Health and Human Service Department, the FBI, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, etc. — and it’s an open question as to whether they’ll make it through the Senate confirmation process.
There have also been avoidable controversies surrounding unnecessary tariff threats, a Trump aide who was accused by his colleagues of influence peddling, and the president-elect’s weird jokes about Canada becoming a state.








