"While Donald Trump has
spent much of his presidency focused on the number of people who want to get
into the U.S., since he took office, record numbers of Americans have wanted to
get out."
While most Americans still
want to stay put, the number of U.S. citizens—particularly young women—who
would leave the country if they could has increased dramatically under
President Donald Trump, according to new Gallup
polling results.
Released Friday as part of the
Gallup World's Poll, the survey found that while only 11 percent and 10 ten
percent wanted to leave the county under former presidents George W. Bush and
Barack Obama, respectively, that number surged to 16 percent in 2018 under
Trump.
While the survey, explained
Gallup, "does not ask people about their political leanings, most of the
recent surge in Americans' desire to migrate has come among groups that
typically lean Democratic and that have disapproved of Trump's job performance
so far in his presidency: women,
young Americans and people in lower-income groups."
While these figures fall in
line more or less with global averages of other developed nations in the world,
and Gallup notes there's not likely to be a mass migration out of the United
States any time soon, the number do put an emphasis on the current president's
low favorability and approval ratings.
For some, the irony of the
poll was hard to miss:
While the poll did not gauge
respondent's political affiliations—and both Bush and Obama experienced highs
and low in terms of overall approval—Gallup says its previous polling did not
register these kinds of shifts about the desire to migrate.
According to Gallup's Julie
Ray and Neli Esipova, what they refer to as the "Trump effect" has
become "a new manifestation of the increasing political polarization"
in the country and is influencing at least some people's desire to leave.
"Before Trump took office, Americans' approval or disapproval of the
president was not a push factor in their desire to migrate."
And just where would they go?
Most—26 percent, Gallup found—would head north to Canada.
For complete methodology and
specific dates of the polling, please review Gallup's
Country Data Set details.
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