Poll: Obama approval ratings drop
Americans say he's not trustworthy
By Ashley Killough CNN
POSTED: 04:07 PM MST Nov 12, 2013 UPDATED: 06:02 PM MST Nov 12, 2013
REUTERS/Larry Downing
WASHINGTON (CNN) -
President Barack Obama's approval rating among American voters has dropped to its lowest number in Quinnipiac University polling since he became President, according to a survey released on Tuesday that also raised new doubts about trust.
As Obama juggles the bungled rollout of HealthCare.gov and questions over his initial promises about health care reform become magnified, only 39% of voters approve how he is handling his job, while 54 percent disapprove, the new data from the school's Polling Institute shows.
Approval numbers for the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, continue to illustrate wariness among American voters about health care reform, with only 19 percent saying they believe the quality of their health care will improve in the next year.
Forty-three percent say it will get worse, while 33 percent say the controversial law won't affect their health care, according to Quinnipiac.
http://www.localnews8.com/news/politics/poll-obama-approval-ratings-drop/-/308336/22938824/-/3nqpnyz/-/index.html
Americans say he's not trustworthy
By Ashley Killough CNN
POSTED: 04:07 PM MST Nov 12, 2013 UPDATED: 06:02 PM MST Nov 12, 2013
REUTERS/Larry Downing
WASHINGTON (CNN) -
President Barack Obama's approval rating among American voters has dropped to its lowest number in Quinnipiac University polling since he became President, according to a survey released on Tuesday that also raised new doubts about trust.
As Obama juggles the bungled rollout of HealthCare.gov and questions over his initial promises about health care reform become magnified, only 39% of voters approve how he is handling his job, while 54 percent disapprove, the new data from the school's Polling Institute shows.
Approval numbers for the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare, continue to illustrate wariness among American voters about health care reform, with only 19 percent saying they believe the quality of their health care will improve in the next year.
Forty-three percent say it will get worse, while 33 percent say the controversial law won't affect their health care, according to Quinnipiac.
http://www.localnews8.com/news/politics/poll-obama-approval-ratings-drop/-/308336/22938824/-/3nqpnyz/-/index.html