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| quote: | Originally posted by imokruok
FYI, the third year of a presidency always has the lowest approval ratings, regardless of what the President does. The ~%50-54 level is actually quite good, and higher than Clinton's was in the third and seventh years of his presidency.
There's a natural rebound at the end of the year, and then people start aligning for the presidential election. If the economy continues to grow at the pace it currently is, he'll be in the mid-60's by the end of February. |
I don't think of those trends because they tend to be false sometimes. I mean, at the beginning of the war, Bush's approval rating was higher than his first two years, so you can't make the assumption that all presidents' third year have low approval ratings.
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