HomeUSGallup Ends 88-Year Presidential Approval Polling: What This Means for Political Insights

Gallup Ends 88-Year Presidential Approval Polling: What This Means for Political Insights

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Gallup, a prominent public opinion polling agency, has announced it will cease tracking presidential approval ratings, effective this year.

On Wednesday, Gallup confirmed to USA Today and The Hill that it will discontinue its measurement of presidential approval. The agency also stated it will no longer release “favorability ratings of political figures.” This change, according to a statement from Gallup to USA Today, is part of a shift in the organization’s focus on public research and thought leadership.

Historically, the Gallup Presidential Approval Rating has been a key metric for media outlets assessing the public’s perception of the president’s job performance.

In its most recent survey, conducted in early December, Gallup reported a 36% approval rating for President Donald Trump.

The latest Gallup data for President Donald Trump in early December showed a 36% approval rating. 

The change is part of “a broader, ongoing effort to align all of Gallup’s public work with its mission,” the company wrote in an email to USA Today. “For nearly a century, Gallup’s U.S. polling has provided rigorous, independent insight into the American people — their perspectives, values and lives. Leadership ratings have been part of Gallup’s history. At the same time, the context around these measures has changed.”

Gallup said the ratings are “widely produced, aggregated and interpreted, and no longer represent an area where Gallup can make its most distinctive contribution.”

“Our commitment is to long-term, methodologically sound research on issues and conditions that shape people’s lives,” the company wrote to USA Today.

The company said its work will continue through the Gallup Poll Social Series, the Gallup Quarterly Business Review, the World Poll and more.

The Washington, D.C.-based company began tracking presidential job performance 88 years ago, during the Depression era.

“To ensure his independence and objectivity, Dr. (George) Gallup resolved that he would undertake no polling that was paid for or sponsored in any way by special-interest groups such as the Republican and Democratic parties — a principle Gallup upholds to this day,” according to Gallup’s website.

More than 4,000 organizations use Gallup’s workplace performance platform, according to the company’s website. It’s unclear when the polling will officially end. 

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