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The numbers landed this morning, and they tell a story Donald Trump did not want told.
In a new Economist/YouGov poll conducted from May 29 to June 1, 55 percent of Americans say they hold a favorable opinion of Pope Leo XIV, against 23 percent who view him unfavorably. That is a net rating of plus thirty-two in a country that agrees on almost nothing, including the color of the sky
Set those figures beside the president’s.
Trump draws a favorable opinion from just 37 percent of the same respondents, while 59 percent view him unfavorably — a net of minus twenty-two.
Put the two side by side and the pope sits fifty-four points ahead of the man in the Oval Office on net favorability, a chasm between a leader Americans trust and one most of them have written off.
This is the pope Trump has spent two months trying to tear down.
I want to walk through the breakdown, because the partisan numbers are where this gets interesting.
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