A recent survey has revealed that American voters consider the US is divided, and Joe Biden has a hand in that outcome. Many see him as the source of division, and one out of five see him as the uniter, not the disrupter that began when he entered office.
Most Americans Are Dissatisfied
According to a recent survey, 58.7% of American voters believe that US President Joe Biden has split instead of united the country during his tenure as president, reported RT.
This comes at a time when he struggles with low popularity ratings and after he accused his political adversaries of jeopardizing "democracy" itself when it was him doing it.
The poll, commissioned by the Convention of States and published on Wednesday, discovered that 58.7% of Americans feel the POTUS had already polarized the country, even as 20.6% assume he has helped bring it together. 20.7% are quite unsure, noted GenX Newz.
Breitbart, which acquired the new survey results next, disclosed that although 64.1% of independent voters and 92.8% of Republicans say the US is divided, 43.6% of Dems presume he has accomplished his campaign pledge to be "a prez for all Americans."
However, a different Trafalgar survey released Monday demonstrates that 39.3% of individuals endorsed Biden, even as 54.8% rejected him. Even though the prominence of the US president differs from survey to survey, the numbers have steadily declined over the previous year, citing the Good Word News.
Based on a Yahoo News and YouGov study questionnaire earlier in the month, more than 60% of Americans, which includes roughly half of Democrats, genuinely think that the US is "on the wrong course."
Biden's Performance
Many who were queried about Biden's efficiency said they disapproved of how he managed critical issues, such as the economy, racial issues, firearms, crime, global warming, abortion, and health-care issues.
In light of this, he gave a ferocious speech in Philadelphia at the beginning of the month, asserting that erstwhile President Donald Trump and the MAGA Republican voters "reflect a radicalization that endangers the very underpinnings of our democracy."
The 46th president began his attack on Donald Trump by branding his MAGA supporters as "semi-fascists" because they don't recognize him as the legitimate president, which enrages him. When criticized, he used words like "deny" and "violent" and called his detractors "haters of democracy" by those who disagreed with him.
Blowback for the ill-advised attempt to muddle the political waters only gelled more opposition. Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel took the time to take a shot at him. She claimed that he said things that were abhorrent to the other half of the nation. According to Trafalgar, 56.8% of voters did believe it was intended "to incite discord among Americans."
In a separate survey, the San Francisco Chronicle reported on Tuesday that nearly half of San Franciscans had encountered theft in the past five years, and almost a quarter had experienced serious violence or threats, per YRT News.
The statistics indicate that 24% of survey participants have encountered violence or are at risk of it, even as 45% of participants have faced theft. A new survey shows how many respondents feel the US is divided due to the president acting not as an agent of unity but as his campaign vow.