The new poll comes from Trump’s favorite pollster.
Over the past four years, President Trump has remade the GOP in his image, but according to a new conservative-leaning poll, his grip on some Republican voters may finally be slipping. Nearly one in four said they think Trump should not be the partyโs nominee in November.
The new poll from Rasmussen Reportsโwhich has become Trumpโs favorite pollster for its notoriously Trump-friendly pollsโfound that 23% of likely Republican voters in the United States said that the GOP should find โsomeone other than Trump to be their nominee.โ Seventy percent said the party should stick with Trump, while 7% were undecided.
Despite the preference of a sizable minority that Republicans nominate someone else, fully 95% of respondents surveyed said they expect Trump to be their nominee, with 85% saying itโs โvery likely.โ
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Men were more likely than women to believe Trump was the right candidate for the GOP and voters under 40 were the strongest believers that Republicans need to nominate someone other than Trump. The poll found that Black voters and other non-white voters held that view more than whites do.
Rasmussenโs survey also found that Trumpโs approval ratings among all voters fell from 49% in February to 45% in April, as he struggled to guide the nation through the worsening coronavirus pandemic that has infected more than 1.4 million Americans and killed more than 85,000. Rasmussenโs daily surveys have found that Trumpโs approval has rebounded slightly in recent days, but other polls have found his approval rating continuing to fall. A Washington Post-Ipsos poll released Tuesday finds that more than half of Americans disapprove of Trumpโs handling of the coronavirus.
Trumpโs rocky poll numbers come as he has ramped up pressure on states to reopen businesses and ease coronavirus-related restrictions, despite warnings from public health officials that doing so could lead to spikes in COVID-19 cases. Trumpโs decision to prioritize reopening the economy over public health appears to have substantially hurt his standing with seniors, a key voting block for Republicans. A recent Morning Consult poll found that Trumpโs approval rating among voters over the age of 65 dropped 20 points between March and the end of April, with nearly six out of seven seniors saying that containing the spread of coronavirus was more important than focusing on the economy.
RELATED: Trumpโs Support Among Older Voters Is Deteriorating
Another possible factor in Trumpโs freefall is that voters simply donโt believe what he says. Only 23% of Americans said they have a great deal or quite a bit of trust in the information that Trump provides on the coronavirus, according to an April Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll.
Trumpโs falling approval ratings stand to benefit his opponent and the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, Joe Biden, who has led Trump in nearly every single national poll since the beginning of April.
But much like Trump, Biden doesnโt have universal support among Democrats. Rasmussenโs survey found that 28% of likely Democratic voters want their party to find someone other than Biden to be their nominee. Fifty-four percent disagree, while 18% arenโt sure. Despite some uncertainty, 92% of Democrats believe itโs likely Biden will be their nominee.
Rasmussenโs telephone and online survey of 1,000 likely voters was conducted from May 12-13. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.


















