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What was the most recent major poll on US presidential rankings?
Executive summary
The most recent major national presidential approval polls in the provided results are from November 2025: Ipsos reports President Donald Trump’s approval at 38% (its lowest of the term) [1], and Emerson College Polling shows 41% approval / 49% disapproval for Trump from a Nov. 3–4, 2025 survey of 1,000 active registered voters [2]. RealClearPolitics and Overton Insights also list or publish November 2025 polling summaries and matchups that reflect the post‑2024 political landscape [3] [4].
1. The immediate evidence: two recent national approval snapshots
Two of the clearest, dated national presidential polls in the search results are Ipsos’s November 2025 tracker, which records a 38% approval for President Trump and labels it the lowest of his second term [1], and Emerson College Polling’s November 3–4, 2025 national survey showing 41% approval and 49% disapproval among active registered voters [2]. Both are contemporary, national measurements of presidential standing and serve as the most recent "major polls" on presidential approval in the set of sources you provided [1] [2].
2. What “most recent major poll” can mean—and how these sources fit
“Most recent” may mean the latest date of fieldwork or the latest publication; “major poll” usually refers to national firms with large samples or reputation. Ipsos and Emerson meet those conventional criteria here: Ipsos runs a standing presidential approval tracker (reported as November 2025) and Emerson published a nationally representative sample of n=1,000 (Nov. 3–4, 2025) [1] [2]. RealClearPolling collects and indexes the latest polls continuously and shows November 2025 updates on its polling pages, which is useful for cross‑checking but not a single poll result [3]. Overton Insights provides targeted matchup polling also dated November 2025 for hypothetical 2028 matchups, showing the broader polling environment beyond simple approval ratings [4].
3. How the numbers compare and what that implies
Ipsos’s 38% and Emerson’s 41% approval figures are close enough to indicate consistent downward pressure on presidential approval in early November 2025, with Ipsos explicitly calling its 38% figure the lowest of the administration’s second term [1]. Emerson’s simultaneous finding that 49% disapprove provides a complementary portrait of public sentiment and includes methodological detail (n=1,000 active registered voters; credibility interval ±3 points) that helps interpret the figure’s precision [2].
4. What the other sources add—and what they don’t
Overton Insights supplies November 2025 hypothetical matchups (e.g., Newsom vs. Vance) and topline dynamics like no political figure in that poll having a positive net approval — useful context for where presidential approval sits amid broader political branding [4]. RealClearPolling’s “Latest Polls” page functions as an aggregator and can show which pollsters published most recently but the results list in the search snippets only indicates Nov. 2025 activity rather than a single poll to cite [3]. The Siena Research Institute entries in the results refer to its long‑running US Presidents Study (expert historical rankings) and repeat Nov. 18, 2025 site updates, but that project ranks presidents historically (by scholars) rather than measuring current presidential approval among the public [5] [6].
5. Limits, caveats and alternative readings
Available sources do not mention every polling shop’s latest release; major organizations such as Gallup, Pew, or YouGov are absent from the provided set, so I cannot say whether other “most recent” polls exist beyond this subset (not found in current reporting). Polls differ by sample (registered vs. likely voters vs. adults), timing, weighting, question wording and methodology — Emerson’s sample and margin details are listed [2] while Ipsos frames its outcome as part of a tracker [1]. Aggregation (e.g., RealClear’s averages) can smooth single‑poll volatility but requires accessing the aggregator itself for the most up‑to‑date composite [3].
6. Quick guidance if you want the single newest poll
If you want the single most recent major poll beyond this selection, consult aggregators like RealClearPolling’s “Latest Polls” [3] or check the polling organizations’ sites (Ipsos, Emerson, Overton) for time‑stamped releases; within the sources provided, Ipsos (Nov. 2025) and Emerson (Nov. 3–4, 2025) are the best candidates for “most recent major poll” on presidential approval [1] [2].