路透社/益普索民调:特朗普支持率升至36%,民众对物价的焦虑有所缓解


2026-06-15T18:49:15.574Z / 路透社

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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives at the Hotel Royal to attend the G7 Summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, June 15, 2026. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/Pool Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

  • 摘要
  • 此次民调覆盖特朗普宣布伊朗停火协议前后的时段
  • 特朗普在物价问题上的支持率从一周前的22%升至24%
  • 如果今天举行选举,登记选民更青睐民主党候选人,支持率为41%比38%

华盛顿6月15日路透电 — 据周一结束的路透社/益普索民调显示,近日来美国总统唐纳德·特朗普的支持率上升一个百分点,至36%,原因是民众对生活成本的不满有所缓解。

这项为期四天的民调在特朗普周日宣布与伊朗领导人达成结束两国战争的协议前后收集了受访者意见,此前这场战争曾推高汽油价格。

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美伊两国和谈带来的乐观情绪近几周推低了汽油价格,但美国人目前在加油站每加仑汽油的花费仍比美国和以色列3月28日袭击伊朗前高出约1美元。

目前约有24%的美国人认可特朗普在生活成本问题上的施政表现,较一周前的22%以及一个月前的20%有所上升。在最新的路透社/益普索民调中,持反对意见的比例从一个月前的73%降至69%。

尽管特朗普的支持率在其核心选民群体如农村选民和福音派基督徒中依然低迷,但这种情况是否会出现转机仍有待观察。他的整体支持率仍接近其政治生涯最低水平,而且民众对他处理生活成本问题的评价,仍比对其民主党前任乔·拜登处理该问题的评价更为负面。

这项在线开展的最新路透社/益普索民调在全美范围内收集了1537名美国成年人的回应,误差幅度为正负3个百分点。

特朗普在2025年1月开启第二任期时,支持率为47%,比当前支持率高出11个百分点,当时他在2024年总统大选中以承诺遏制持续高通胀当选。

近期美国通胀报告显示,这一承诺并未兑现,民众对物价上涨的不满可能会拖累特朗普的共和党盟友,他们在11月3日的中期选举中仅以微弱优势掌控国会多数席位。

民调中约41%的登记选民表示,如果今天举行国会选举,他们会为所在选区的民主党候选人投票,而表示会投票给共和党人的比例为38%。另有18%的人表示不确定或考虑支持第三方候选人。可能决定许多选举结果的独立选民以13个百分点的优势支持民主党,比例为35%比22%。

杰森·朗格 华盛顿报道;斯科特·马龙与迪帕·巴宾顿 编辑

我们的报道准则:汤姆森路透社信任原则,opens new tab

杰森·朗格是专注于政治数据报道的华盛顿通讯员。可发送爆料邮件至jason.lange@thomsonreuters.com

Trump’s approval ticks up to 36% as price angst eases, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

2026-06-15T18:49:15.574Z / Reuters

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives at the Hotel Royal to attend the G7 Summit in Evian-les-Bains, France, June 15, 2026. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/Pool Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

  • Summary
  • Poll spanned before and after Trump announced Iran ceasefire deal
  • Trump’s cost-of-living approval rose to 24% from 22% a week earlier
  • Registered voters favored Democratic candidates 41% to 38% if elections were held today

WASHINGTON, June 15 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump’s approval rating ticked a percentage point higher in recent days ‌to 36% as public dissatisfaction over the cost of living grew less intense, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll that closed on Monday.

The four-day poll gathered responses before and after Trump announced on Sunday that he and Iranian leaders had agreed to ​end a war between the two countries that had pushed gasoline prices sharply higher.

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Optimism over peace ​talks between the two countries has pushed gasoline prices lower in recent weeks, ⁠though Americans are still paying roughly a dollar more per gallon at the pump than they were ​before the United States and Israel launched attacks on Iran on February 28.

Some 24% of Americans currently approve ​of Trump’s stewardship over the cost of living, up from 22% a week earlier and 20% a month ago. The share who disapprove has eased to 69% in the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll from 73% a month earlier.

It remains to be seen ​if Trump’s popularity, which has suffered even among groups core to his political base such as rural voters ​and evangelical Christians, could be turning a corner. His overall approval rating remains near the lowest levels of his political career, ‌and people ⁠still take a harsher view of his handling of the cost of living than they did of how his Democratic predecessor in office, Joe Biden, handled the issue.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, which was conducted online, gathered responses from 1,537 U.S. adults nationwide and had a margin of error of 3 percentage points in ​either direction.

Trump started his second ​term in January 2025 ⁠with a 47% approval rating – 11 percentage points higher than his current rating – after winning the prior year’s presidential election with a promise to get persistently ​high inflation under control.

That hasn’t happened, a recent U.S. inflation report showed, and dissatisfaction ​over rising ⁠prices could weigh on Trump’s Republican allies defending narrow congressional majorities in the November 3 midterm elections.

Some 41% of registered voters in the poll said they would vote for a Democratic candidate in their district if the congressional ⁠elections ​were held today, compared to 38% who said they would vote Republican. Another ​18% said they weren’t sure or were considering a third party. Independent voters, who could be decisive in many elections, favored Democrats ​over Republicans by 13 points, 35% to 22%.

Reporting by Jason Lange; editing by Scott Malone and Deepa Babington

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Jason Lange is a Washington correspondent focused on political data. Send tips to jason.lange@thomsonreuters.com

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