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No, Donald Trump's poll numbers do not beat Lincoln, all other GOP presidents
President Donald Trump is known for tooting his own horn. In recent weeks, one of the accomplishments he’s been trumpeting is his standing with Republican voters.
In a July 29 tweet, Trump wrote, "Wow, highest Poll Numbers in the history of the Republican Party. That includes Honest Abe Lincoln and Ronald Reagan. There must be something wrong, please recheck that poll!"
It wasn’t the first time he’d said something similar. On July 10, he said in a tweet, "New Poll says Trump, at over 90%, is the most popular Republican in history of the Party."
And three days later, in an interview with the British newspaper The Sun, Trump said, "You know, a poll just came out that I am the most popular person in the history of the Republican Party. Beating Lincoln. I beat our Honest Abe."
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Trump has reason to crow about his popularity among Republicans: His approval rating within his own party has ranged from 84 percent to 90 percent since mid April 2018.
The ratings for approval among Republicans "are moving in a narrow range," said Karlyn Bowman, a polling analyst with the American Enterprise Institute. "They are very high and pretty stable."
And the media has taken note. Around Trump’s 500th day in office on June 4, there were a flurry of articles that noted how Trump’s approval ratings at that point in their tenure were higher than those of most previous Republican presidents, at least among respondents in their own party.
For instance, the Daily Mail cited Gallup — the longest-running source for presidential approval ratings – to report that Republicans’ support for Trump, then at 87 percent, was higher on his 500th day than any post-war president except for George W. Bush, who was at 96 percent with Republicans after the 9/11 attacks. (For that matter, no Democrat had a higher rating with Democrats than Trump did with Republicans.)
But the way Trump phrased his tweet was problematic. One concern involves polling at the time of Honest Abe — to be precise, the lack thereof. The other involves higher approval ratings of recent Republican presidents.
Unscientific straw polls date to at least 1824, with "informal trial heat tallies" "taken in scattered taverns, militia offices, and public meetings," D. Sunshine Hillygus, a Duke University political scientist, has written.
But the polls of Lincoln’s time are not considered scientific.
The idea of scientific polling came into its own after a disastrous 1936 poll by Literary Digest, a popular magazine. The magazine’s poll was based on responses from millions of Americans, but the data it gathered had a significantly different demographic balance than the electorate as a whole. This lack of scientific rigor led the poll to incorrectly call the 1936 presidential election, opening the door to survey methods championed by George Gallup and others.
Gallup began polling in 1935 using a method that's different from today's but rigorous for its time. Early polls by Gallup determined the demographic makeup of the electorate, then assigned survey-takers to visit far-flung locales in order to personally interview respondents with certain demographic characteristics.
Today, reputable pollsters use a better system: random sampling to choose phone numbers from across the country, which they then call to ask standardized, carefully worded questions. The assumption is that a truly random sample will reproduce the whole nation in microcosm to within a few percentage points of accuracy (the familiar "margin of error").
Modern polling has its critics, and the industry has had to adapt its methods to account for factors such as the growing use of cell phones. One newer type of poll is based on online "panels" of voters designed to mirror the demographics of the electorate.
Despite its imperfections, scientific polling remains the best tool available. And Lincoln never faced it.
Now let’s look at the only Republican presidents for whom scientific polling data exists.
The most recent publicly available data from Gallup’s weekly tracking poll at the time of Trump’s tweet showed him with 85 percent approval from Republicans.
So how does that 85 percent rating compare with his Republican predecessors? We looked at Gallup historical data for Republican presidents going back to Eisenhower. We looked for the closest polling data for July 29 of their second year in office (the day of Trump’s claim). We used the equivalent period after the inauguration of Gerald Ford, who unlike the others was not sworn in on Jan. 20.
President
Approval rating among Republicans, near July 29 of second year
Donald Trump
85 percent
George W. Bush
96 percent
George H.W. Bush*
79 percent or 91 percent
Ronald Reagan
74 percent
Gerald Ford
67 percent
Richard Nixon
81 percent
Dwight Eisenhower
92 percent
*For the elder Bush, Gallup polling around the relevant date was less frequent; we’re showing the closest results on either side of that date, one of which is higher than Trump and the other of which is lower.
So, as of the point of Trump’s tweet, not only did George W. Bush have a higher approval rating among Republicans, but so did Dwight Eisenhower and, arguably, George H.W. Bush.
Two other points of comparison make Trump’s achievement less impressive.
One is to compare Trump’s highest approval rating of his tenure so far — 90 percent as recently as mid-July — to the record-high rating for his predecessors through July 29 of their second year in office.
President
Highest approval rating among Republicans through July 29 of second year
Donald Trump
90 percent
George W. Bush
99 percent
George H.W. Bush
94 percent
Ronald Reagan
92 percent
Gerald Ford
77 percent
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Richard Nixon
90 percent
Dwight Eisenhower
92 percent
By this measure, Trump actually ties for the second-worst of any post-World War II Republican president, surpassing only Ford.
Another approach is to compare each president on the highest approval rating of their tenure. (Trump has only been in office for a year and a half, but he opened the door to this analysis by claiming the "highest poll numbers in the history of the Republican Party.")
President
Highest approval rating among Republicans, entire time in office
Donald Trump
90 percent
George W. Bush
99 percent
George H.W. Bush
97 percent
Ronald Reagan
94 percent
Gerald Ford
80 percent
Richard Nixon
91 percent
Dwight Eisenhower
95 percent
Once again, by this measure, Trump fares the second worst of any post-war Republican president, only surpassing Ford.
By historical standards, Trump has had "solid, but not extraordinary in-party approval," said Kathleen Joyce Weldon, director of data operations and communications at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University.
Worth noting: The differences in some cases are small and would be within the margin of error.
While Trump remains popular among Republicans, it’s worth noting that his approval rating among Americans as a whole is quite a bit lower. (Trump’s 40 percent approval rating, per Gallup, was exceeded by all of his predecessors at that point in their presidencies.)
In the meantime, a smaller proportion of Americans are identifying themselves as Republicans, said Steven Smith, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis.
According to Gallup, the share of Americans who call themselves Republicans was 31 percent from Feb. 1-5, 2017, the first measure after Trump was inaugurated. But between March and July 2018, that number has ranged between 23 percent and 27 percent.
While the shift is small, Smith said, it may be a sign that some critics of Trump within the Republican Party are simply leaving the party for now, rather than registering a negative assessment to pollsters as a Republican.
Trump said, "Wow, highest Poll Numbers in the history of the Republican Party. That includes Honest Abe Lincoln and Ronald Reagan."
Credit where credit is due: Trump is very popular among Republicans, and at one point, his approval rating within his own party trailed only George W. Bush among postwar Republican presidents.
However, no pre-1936 president served in an era with scientific polling, so Trump’s comparison of himself to Lincoln is spurious. Meanwhile, Trump’s approval rating at the time of the tweet ranked in the middle of the post-World War II Republican presidents, and measured in other ways, his support among Republicans was actually worse than every post-war Republican president except for Gerald Ford.
We rate the statement False.
Our Sources
Donald Trump, tweet, July 29, 2018
Donald Trump, tweet, July 10, 2018
The Sun, "Donald Trump ‘feels unwelcome’ in London but insists real Brits ‘love the President,’" July 13, 2018
Gallup, "Presidential Approval Ratings -- Donald Trump," accessed July 30, 2018
Gallup, "Presidential Job Approval Center," accessed July 30, 2018
Gallup, "Party Affiliation," accessed July 30, 2018
D. Sunshine Hillygus, "The Evolution of Election Polling in the United States" (Public Opinion Quarterly), Dec. 1, 2011
Daily Mail, "Donald Trump is more popular with Republicans than almost any president since WWII with an approval rating of 87 per cent, poll finds," June 15, 2018
Washington Examiner, "GOP wants Trump in 2020, more popular than Obama, JFK, Reagan," June 15, 2018
PolitiFact, "George Will says Democrats in 1930s wanted FDR 'to be more conservative,’" July 22, 2010
Email interview with Karlyn Bowman, polling analyst with the American Enterprise Institute, July 31, 2018
Email interview with Kathleen Joyce Weldon, director of data operations and communications at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University, July 31, 2018
Email interview with said Steven Smith, political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis, July 31, 2018
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No, Donald Trump's poll numbers do not beat Lincoln, all other GOP presidents
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