President Donald Trump’s approval rating remained underwater across several major issues, according to latest New York Times/Siena College poll.
The poll, released Monday, found Trump has an unchanged approval rating of 43% among registered voters. Another 54% of voters said they disapproved of how the president was handling his job and 3% said they did not know.
The poll results are in line with other recent polls. The New York Times’ daily poll tracker, which tracks the presidential approval rating across dozens of different organizations, shows Trump with an average approval rating of 43% as of Sept. 30.
The poll also surveyed voters on Trump’s job performance across seven different issues: crime, immigration, the economy, managing the federal government, trade with other countries, the Russia-Ukraine war and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The only issue he clinched a net positive approval rating in was crime, with 48% of voters approving and 47% disapproving. He received net negative approval ratings across the remaining six issues.
On immigration, 46% of voters said they approved of Trump’s handling, while 52% disapproved. He also received low marks for his handling of the economy, with a 44% approval rating and a 53% disapproval rating.
More than half of voters, 54%, disapproved of how Trump was managing the federal government while just 44% approved. Fifty-three percent disapproved of how Trump’s handling of trade policies, while 44% approved.
He also received low approval ratings on his handling of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. Thirty-seven percent of voters approved of his handling of the Russia-Ukraine war and 36% approved of his handling of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
The poll also asked voters whether Trump had gone “too far” on certain actions, including pressuring media organizations that cover Trump “unfairly,” sending the National Guard into U.S. cities, immigration enforcement, pressuring corporations to make certain decisions, and pressuring higher education institutions to adopt different policies.
Sixty-one percent of voters said Trump went “too far” in pressuring media organizations. Fifty-three percent said Trump went “too far” in deploying the National Guard and 51% said the same of immigration enforcement.
Half of voters said Trump’s actions went “too far” in pressuring corporations while 49% said the same of pressuring higher education institutions.
The poll was conducted among 1,313 registered between Sept. 22 and Sept. 27. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.2 percentage points among registered voters.