The U.S. media is riddled with lawsuits, so that Trump s approval rating has risen instead of fallin

Mondo International Updated on 2024-03-06

According to the U.S. "Wall Street" on March 4, Trump was sued and ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in fines for fraud and defamation. But for many Republican voters in the far suburbs of Raleigh, North Carolina, Mr. Trump should not be disqualified from returning to the White House.

Rather, it makes them more likely to support Trump in this week's Super Tuesday primary, as they believe that Trump, who leads the party, is unfairly targeted by his political opponents. They said that from the tenacity he showed in the face of adverse factors, it was evident that he would fight for them if he won the ** election in November.

Charriet Corbett, 67, initially considered backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and business person Vivek Ramaswamy, but after seeing Trump go through blow after blow, she decided Trump was the tougher candidate.

A recent Wall Street poll found that Trump's image and political standing have become more solid over the past year, despite facing four different criminal charges and unfavorable civil verdicts for defamation and commercial fraud.

In previous Wall Street 2024 campaign polls, Trump trailed or tied Biden, but in both recent polls, Trump led Biden. A poll released by Wall Street** on the 3rd showed that he narrowly led Biden by 47% to 45%. In the new survey, which included independent third-party candidates, Trump's advantage was extended to 5 percentage points, 40 percent to 35 percent.

According to reports, one of the reasons why Trump is leading is that the camp that supports him is not as good as Biden's support camp. According to the latest Wall Street** survey, 83% of voters who supported Trump in 2020 said they still supported him, while only 73% of Biden's supporters will continue to vote for him.

According to the report, the poll results on the 3rd showed that 89% of Republicans made it clear that they would vote for Trump. Eighty-six percent said they would support Trump even if the former was convicted of a felony. (Compiled by Li Fengqin).

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