Trump expelled from the White House, Melania is also hated
Melania Trump left the White House with the lowest profit rate in her tenure.
First Lady Melania Trump will leave the White House ranked the lowest favorite of her tenure, according to a new CNN poll.
It is noted that as many as 47 percent of people have an unfavorable view of the first lady now than at any point since CNN first asked her views in February 2016.The poll conducted by SSRS for CNN, put Trump's favorable rating at 42 percent, with 12 percent of those who answered were not sure how they felt about the First Lady.
Melania Trump's highest favorite ranking was in May 2018, at 57 percent according to a CNN poll taken at the time. The achievement came after the first state dinner and the presence of Melania Trump at the funeral of late first lady Barbara Bush in Texas. He went to the funeral without President Donald Trump's presence.
However, in December of that year, public opinion about Melania Trump fell by double digits following her solo trip to Africa. At the time, liking was at 43 percent and disliked at 36 percent, according to polls conducted at the time.
The first lady's favorite ranking is currently notably higher than that of the President (33 percent) and among Republicans, her favorite rate (84 percent) is higher than that of the President (79 percent) or the Vice President (72 percent).
Public opinion about Melania Trump when she left the White House appears to be below that of her predecessor. According to a CNN / ORC poll in January 2017, Michelle Obama left the White House with a 69 percent rating, which is the same number as when she entered eight years earlier. Laura Bush's breakup ratings were mostly positive too, even though her husband was unpopular at the time.
In 2009, a CNN / ORC poll ranked Bush in a favorable 67 percent, while George W. Bush was viewed positively by only 35 percent of respondents. Hillary Clinton will also beat Trump as the preferred first lady. In the November 2000 CNN / USA Today / Gallup poll, just before Clinton left, the preferred figure was 56 percent, 14 percentage points higher than Trump.
The methodology and weights for the poll have been modified compared to the previous CNN poll. Interviews conducted on cell phones accounted for 75 percent of the total, up from 65 percent in the previous survey. Calls were extended for six days rather than four, allowing more effort to be made to reach those who were not easy to reach.
The demographic weightings were adjusted to take into account more separate categories of education grouped by race. Furthermore, geographic weights are applied to ensure a representative distribution according to population density. In addition, results are weighted for partisan identification and leaning among independent parties, with targets calculated using the average of current polls plus three recent CNN polls.
The new CNN poll was conducted by SSRS on January 9 to 14 among a random national sample of 1,003 adults contacted by landline or mobile by in-person interviewers. The results for the complete sample have a sampling error margin of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.