According to the latest polling average of Net Silver, Elon Musk’s popularity with the American people is ending Silver Bulletin. The billionaire CEOs of several companies have been wearing many hats, but the most visible department has been the face of the government’s performance (Dodge), which is an organization that is tearing through the US government’s administrative state.
Silver BulletinOn average, 53.5 % of Americans have an inappropriate view of musk, and only 39.6 % of Americans see it favorable. According to the site tracker, its unpopularity has ended since the beginning of 2024 when only 38 % of people disliked it. The Silver writes that his process to track Musk’s rating is like how he tracks President Trump, but “with a slightly more conservative settings that Musk is polling less often than Trump.”
According to Silver Bulletin, For Trump’s second presidential campaign, negative ideas about billionaires, especially in the context of their heavy support – pay voters – and after the start of their work on the Dodge, are moving upward through the payment of voters. The work has witnessed a large -scale federal agency vacation because efforts to access or access dodge workers, including government sensitive areas, including IRS records, US Treasury payment system, and the US Social Security Administration.
However valid Silver BulletinOn average, the site is not alone in noting the unpopularity of the musk. Like outlets Fox NewsFor, for, for, for,. PolytecoAnd Axios Recently, the vote has been pointed out, demonstrating the growing problem for billionaires.
This would have already yielded election results for the Republican in Wisconsin, where Musk tried to strengthen the conservative Supreme Court candidate this month-which used the same tactic to pay voters during Trump’s campaign-it seems that he has been backfire. More than half of the voters refused to join the state, and almost a third said it had reduced the chances of voting in favor of conservative justice. Washington Post. Finally, Democratic candidate Susan Kurford won by 10 points, which secured the 4-3 liberal majority of Wisconsin’s highest court.