The
four-day poll, which ended on Monday, showed a marginal increase
in Biden's popularity from last month, when 40% of respondents
said they approved of his performance since taking office in
January 2021. The poll has a margin of error of three percentage
points.
The economy remained the top concern, amid high rates of
inflation and a push by central bankers to tame prices by
raising interest rates, which has made mortgages and car loans
costlier.
Democrat Biden reached a deal last week with U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the top elected
Republican official, to suspend a limit on federal borrowing
following weeks of talks. The deal averted the financial
disaster that would have unfolded if the government were forced
to stop paying all its bills.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll showed only 27% of Americans approve of
how McCarthy is handling his job.
Some 56% of the poll's respondents supported sending more U.S.
weapons and financial aid to Ukraine in its war against invading
Russian forces, about the same share as in a February poll.
But that backing is not evenly distributed across the two
political parties. Some 73% of Democrats said they backed more
aid, compared to 44% of Republicans.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll gathered responses from 1,056 adults,
using a nationally representative sample.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; editing by Andy Sullivan and Grant
McCool)
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