Trump is very unpopular in Mass., but even more unpopular in this New England state
Briefly

Approval of President Trump varies notably by state. Vermont has the highest disapproval at 64%, up from 62% in March; Massachusetts follows at 62%, up from 58%. New England disapproval exceeds 50%: Connecticut 58%, Rhode Island 56%, Maine 56%, New Hampshire 55%. Wyoming shows the highest approval at 66%, down from 76% in March. National approval is 47% as of Aug. 18, up from 45% two weeks earlier but down from 52% at the start of the second term. Approval is above 50% in 27 states, including Nevada, Georgia, and North Carolina. Arizona is nearly split at 49% approval and 48% disapproval. Data derive from three months of daily surveys with margins of error of about 6% in less populous states and 1% in more populous states.
In Vermont, the state where Trump fared the worst, 64% of voters disapprove of him, which is up from 62% in March. Sixty-two percent of voters in Massachusetts disapprove of the president, making the Bay State second on the list of states where he's most unpopular. That's up from 58% in March. Across New England, disapproval of Trump runs steadily over 50%: Connecticut at 58%, Rhode Island and Maine at 56%, and New Hampshire at 55%.
On the flip side, Trump is most popular in Wyoming, with a 66% approval rating. However, popularity in Wyoming has fallen from 76% in March. Trump's overall approval rating is 47% amongst all voters in the nation as of Aug. 18, up from 45% in the two weeks prior, according to Morning Consult. The president's overall rating is down from 52% at the start of his second term.
Throughout the country, Trump's approval rating is above 50% in 27 states, including in 2024 swing states Nevada, Georgia, and North Carolina, Morning Consult reported. Trump's approval is split almost even in Arizona, with 49% of voters approving of his job performance and 48% not. Virginia and New Jersey will have gubernatorial elections this fall, and both states disapprove of Trump with rates at 52% and 53% respectively, the report states.
Read at Boston.com
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