Joe Biden received no boost in the polls following his State of the Union address, with his approval rating average actually hitting a new low on March 12.
Despite being hailed as a “fiery” speech by the legacy media, the 81-year-old’s address to Congress and the wider public has seemingly done nothing to improve his public standing, with ABC News editorial director of data analytics G. Elliott Morris observing his updated approval rating average has actually dipped to a “new all-time low.”
Calculations by FiveThirtyEight give Biden a disapproval rating of 56.5 percent and an approval rating of just 37.4 percent. His collapse in popularity has been stunning, with his approval having stood at over 50 percent and his disapproval at around 30 percent in January 2021.
Disapproval overtook approval as early as September 2021, and he has remained net negative ever since.
While Biden managed to avoid any significant memory lapses during his SOTU address, it was not entirely without stumbles. During a terse, impromptu exchange with conservative lawmakers on the killing of Laken Riley, the President shouted “I know how to say her name!” before twice referring to her as “Lincoln.”
He also received criticism from people on his own side for saying Riley had been “killed by an illegal,” with Rep. Nancy Pelosi saying he should have referred to her suspected murderer as “undocumented.”
Biden initially expressed “regret” for his language, before his team issued a statement insisting he “absolutely did not apologize” for it, with observers saying the gaffe gave an appearance of weakness and prevarication.
Biden has seen no State of the Union poll bump yet. In fact, today's updated approval rating average is a new all-time lowhttps://t.co/hBrpbNmo7Q pic.twitter.com/kDP2Fc4xjK
— G Elliott Morris (@gelliottmorris) March 12, 2024