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Six in 10 voters would back someone other than President Biden if the 2024 presidential election were today, according to a Fox News national survey released Lord's day. That makes his current re-election prospects dimmer than they e'er were for his most recent predecessors, Donald Trump and Barack Obama.

At the stop of Biden's first year in function, economic anxiety is higher than a year ago, and many feel the pandemic is not at all under control. His job rating in both these areas is downwards in recent months, and over half of voters disapprove of Biden'due south performance overall.

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The president's chore rating has been underwater since October and that still holds truthful: 47% corroborate and 52% disapprove.

BIDEN'S FIRST YEAR: ABOUT HALF OF NOMINEES AWAITING SENATE CONFIRMATION

Overall, 54% approved of Biden at his 100-day mark in April. The 7-point pass up since tin be attributed almost solely to a drop among Democrats (from 95% in April to 85% today). Approval amid Republicans and independents has changed by only a bespeak or two over the same flow.

President Biden listens to a question during a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington Jan. 19, 2022. 

President Biden listens to a question during a news conference in the Eastward Room of the White House in Washington Jan. 19, 2022. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Approval of Biden reached as high as 56% (June) and cruel as low equally 44% (November).

Biden's current job ratings are nearly identical to sometime President Donald Trump'south at this point in his presidency, as 45% approved and 53% disapproved in January 2018.

Vice President Kamala Harris' job rating is a scrap worse than Biden'southward: 43% approve, 54% disapprove. Seventy-viii percent of Democrats and xi% of Republicans approve.

Biden's ratings are too negative on top issues. A record 52% disapprove of his handling of the pandemic, upwards from 34% in early on 2021. Even larger numbers disapprove on foreign policy (54%), the economy (58%) and border security (59%).

Lxx-three percent of voters say economic conditions are only fair or poor, up from 66% terminal December.

Even more than, 85%, are worried almost inflation, and that sentiment is bipartisan: 81% of Democrats and 91% of Republicans are concerned.

Voters don't agree on what'southward causing inflation. By 48-42%, more blame regime policies than the pandemic. Democrats (66%) point to the pandemic, while Republicans (73%) cite federal policies.

Republicans (fourscore%) are too more likely than Democrats (56%) to call up inflation is sticking around for another year or more. Overall, more two-thirds feel that style (69%).


The percent saying the pandemic is "non at all" under command jumped xiii points since last month, from 28 to 41%. Nearly three quarters (72%) remain concerned most coronavirus.

Near two-thirds believe vaccines and masks are effective in the fight confronting COVID-19, while only over half say the same about frequent testing and vaccine mandates. Democrats are at to the lowest degree twice as likely as Republicans to recall masks, mandates, and vaccines work. The gap is most narrow on vaccines: 86% of Democrats say effective vs. 51% of Republicans.

But over one-half call up the Centers for Illness Command and Prevention is doing a competent job, but voters cut the CDC slack on one particular issue: More than aspect the agency's irresolute pandemic advice to learning new data rather than an disability to communicate clearly.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky speaks during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 4, 2021.

Centers for Disease Command and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky speaks during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing on Capitol Colina in Washington, Nov. four, 2021. (REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz)

A large majority desire children to have some sort of in-person schoolhouse this term. Twenty-eight percent think schools should be fully open up as usual, 27% say open with distancing and masks and thirty% want a mix of in-person and remote. Fourteen percent adopt schools be fully remote.

Parents and non-parents hold like views, with fewer than one in 5 favoring schools being fully remote.

Re-elect Biden in 2024?

More than voters say they would dorsum someone else over Biden in 2024 than ever said the same most onetime presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump.

While 36% would re-elect Biden, 60% would not. The highest "someone else" number for Obama was 54% (September 2010) and 56% for Trump (January 2018).

Moreover, 21% say they would "definitely" re-elect Biden, yet twice as many — 44% — would "definitely" back someone else. The largest number saying they would definitely vote for someone else during the Trump administration was 48% (January 2018).

Seventy-two percent of Democrats would re-elect Biden, including 48% who say "definitely."  Similarly, amidst those approving of the job Biden is doing, 74% would re-elect him (45 % definitely).

"These certainly aren't numbers the Biden team wants, only Democratic defection is the main reason his generic re-elect is low," says Democratic pollster Chris Anderson, who jointly conducts Trick News surveys with Republican Daron Shaw. "It's condom to assume most of these Democrats will back him if he is the nominee and the only choice confronting a Republican."

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Conducted January. xvi-19, 2022, under the joint direction of Buoy Research (D) and Shaw & Company Enquiry (R), this Fox News Poll includes interviews with ane,001 registered voters nationwide who were randomly selected from a national voter file and spoke with live interviewers on both landlines and cellphones. The total sample has a margin of sampling fault of plus or minus three percentage points.

Play a trick on News' Victoria Balara contributed to this report.