Gallup, presidential
Digest more
American workers adopted artificial intelligence into their work lives at a remarkable pace over the past few years, according to a new poll.
11don MSN
Gallup ends its presidential tracking poll, the latest shift in the public opinion landscape
Gallup, one of the country’s most well-known polling firms, announced Wednesday that they will no longer track presidential approval or favorability of political figures. The move ends the longest-running continuous effort to track US opinion of the nation’s president,
Gallup will no longer track presidential approval ratings after more than eight decades doing so, the public opinion polling agency confirmed to The Hill on Wednesday. The company said starting this year it would stop publishing approval and favorability ratings of individual political figures,
Gallup is ending its presidential approval rating poll after nearly 90 years, the pollster said Feb. 11. Here's what to know.
Gallup is no longer producing presidential approval ratings starting in 2026, ending its over 80-year practice. The oft-cited analytics company has been tracking presidential approval ratings since former President Harry Truman took office.
The firm that pioneered political survey research nearly nine decades ago said that it had stopped publishing presidential approval ratings.
The Gallup organization, founded by George Gallup, announced on Feb. 11 they will no longer conduct their well-known polls that rate whether Americans approve or disapprove of the way presidents are handling their job.
Gallup, who turned 35 in 1936, had launched a research company the year before. To promote his work, he undertook his own election survey in 1936. Gallup reached only 50,000 people, a pitiful fraction of The Literary Digest ’s awe-inspiring mailbag. He predicted—correctly—a solid Roosevelt win.