Monday | 15 June 2026 | Reg No- 06
বাংলা
Bangla | Monday | 15 June 2026 | Epaper
BREAKING: Congo sees sharpest daily rise in Ebola cases since outbreak began      Dhaka summons Indian diplomat over adviser’s airport detention in Delhi      Ad-din denies wrongdoing amid licence cancellation row      4 more die as measles toll reaches 656      Benazir's role in past elections under scrutiny, says ICT prosecutor      No plans for new govt jute mills      Firing at hanging student during July uprising: ICT to announce verdict on Jun 28      

Trump's support in rural America slips as fuel and food prices climb

Published : Monday, 15 June, 2026 at 12:00 AM  Count : 25
WASHINGTON, Jun 14: Brian Rauch has felt the squeeze of higher gas prices on his 30-mile (50-km) drives from his home in rural Stevensville, Montana, to the doctor's office. He has also noticed food prices going up and, as an Air Force veteran, sees little rationale for the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
These are among the reasons the 42-year-old increasingly disapproves of the performance of President Donald Trump, the man he voted for in the last three presidential elections, putting him among a growing portion of rural Americans disappointed by his leadership in Washington.
Trump's approval rating among rural Americans dropped in June to a new low of 50%, according to the June 3-8 Reuters/Ipsos poll. That compares with 60% approval in February 2025 shortly after Trump took office.
Rural disapproval of Trump's performance meanwhile rose to 48% from 34% in February 2025, according to the poll of 4,531 U.S. adults nationwide. The poll, which was conducted online, had a margin of error of 3 percentage points for people in rural areas and 2 points for Americans overall.
The discontent is notable for a voting bloc that has strongly supported Trump in his presidential campaigns, and could have implications for Trump's Republican party in November's midterm elections, where they will defend slim majorities in the U.S. Congress.
Trump won rural voters by 40 points in the 2024 election, up from 31 points in the 2020 election and 25 points in 2016, according to an exit poll analysis by Pew Research Center.
Trump's overall approval rate of 35% is also near the lowest of his political career, as most Americans fear a continued rise in gas prices fueled by the Iran war, the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.
Bryan Shaver, 62, an insurance agent in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, voted for Trump in the 2024 election but said he is frustrated by persistently high food prices.
Shaver, who said he has long supported Republican politicians and once worked for Mississippi Senator Roger Wicker when he was a congressman, is now concerned that high prices will hurt the party in the midterms.
"I have a feeling we’re going to be in big trouble in November," he said.
Driving the decline in rural support is disapproval of Trump's stewardship over the cost of living and the U.S. economy, the polling data showed.
Just 31% of rural respondents said they approve of Trump's handling of those issues, while 61% disapproved. In February 2025, about 45% of rural respondents approved of Trump's handling of cost of living issues, and 43% disapproved." REUTERS



Loading...
Loading...
Also read
Editor : Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury
Published by the Editor on behalf of the Observer Ltd. from Globe Printers, 24/A, New Eskaton Road, Ramna, Dhaka.
Editorial, News and Commercial Offices : Aziz Bhaban (2nd floor), 93, Motijheel C/A, Dhaka-1000.
Phone: PABX- 41053001-06; Online: 41053014; Advertisement: 41053012.
E-mail: district@dailyobserverbd.com, news@dailyobserverbd.com, advertisement@dailyobserverbd.com, For Online Edition: mailobserverbd@gmail.com
🔝
close