Trump’s Approval Rating Among Farmers Hits 74 Percent

Bowen Xiao
By Bowen Xiao
June 30, 2019Politics
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Trump’s Approval Rating Among Farmers Hits 74 Percent
US President Donald Trump delivers remarks on supporting America's farmers and ranchers, , flanked by US Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue (C-L), at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 23, 2019. (Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images)

A sizeable majority of American farmers and ranchers continue to approve of how President Donald Trump is handling his job, according to a new monthly poll by Farm Journal, an agricultural media company.

Trump touted the results of the poll as he was heading back from meetings at the G-20 Summit. The president, at the same time, lamented how Americans farmers were being treated.

“The highly respected Farm Journal has just announced my Approval Rating with our great Farmers at 74%, and that despite all of the Fake & Corrupt News that they are forced to endure,” he said in a June 29 Twitter post.

“Farmers have been unfairly treated for many years – and that is turning around FAST!”

The Farm Journal Pulse poll sent texts asking farmers one question only: “Do you approve or disapprove of the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president?”

Out of the 5000 farmers asked, 1,129 responded to the survey’ question. Out of those, 50 percent said they “strongly approve” of the way Trump is handling the presidency, with another 24 percent saying that they “somewhat approve.”

The latest results were statistically the same as those conducted in December last year, when the Pulse survey first recorded Trump’s approval ratings among farmers. The survey has been conducted 5 times so far.

Randy Russell of The Russell Group, an agriculture consulting firm, linked the high ratings among farmers to a numbers of reasons, including Trump’s efforts to counter China’s theft of U.S. intellectual property.

“The Chinese have been stealing our intellectual property and forcing companies to transfer technology to them. We’re at a pivotal point, and for the first time we’ve got a president who’s trying to do something about it. Farmers may not agree with every tactic he uses or everything he says, but they support what he’s trying to accomplish,” Russell said earlier this year, according to the Farm Journal.

In May, Trump authorized the the Department of Agriculture to give $16 billion to to U.S. farmers suffering from Chinese tariffs. Trump said in a statement at the time that his administration is “fighting for our great farmers” on “every front.”

‘Back On Track’

Trump said he had an “excellent” meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit on June 29, adding that the two sides were “back on track.”

“Excellent, I would say excellent. As good as it was going to be,” Trump told reporters after the conclusion of the bilateral meeting.

Trump added that the meeting was better than expected and that the negotiations with Beijing were continuing.

The president declined to comment on whether a deal was struck during the meeting.

The talks between the two leaders marked the first official meeting since the last G-20 in Argentina, held in late 2018 when both sides agreed to a 90-day truce in the U.S.-China trade dispute—a ceasefire that ended when trade talks broke down in early May.

Trump has since threatened to impose tariffs on $325 billion of Chinese goods if the meeting with Xi did not yield progress.

Meanwhile, Chinese state-run media Xinhua has reported that the two leaders agreed in the meeting to resume stalled trade talks.

The outlet added that Trump agreed not to impose further tariffs while the negotiations were ongoing.

Emel Akan contributed to this report

From The Epoch Times

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