Opinion Today
June 4, 2026
61% think Trump wins almost always or most of the time at the Supreme Court Charles Franklin, Marquette Law School Poll • 57% say the Court goes out of its way to avoid a ruling Trump might refuse to obey • Public is evenly divided on whether the Court is motivated mainly by law or by politics • Approval of the Court rose to 46% in May, from 42% in April • Opinion is evenly divided on enlarging the Court, but 79% favor limited terms for justices • Two-thirds disagree with Trump’s position against birthright citizenship and with his claim of a president’s right to remove members of Federal Reserve • 63% say state laws banning transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s teams should be upheld
Voters Reject the Republican Position in Current Supreme Court Cases Data for Progress As the Supreme Court prepares to issue its final rulings of the term, it is weighing multiple cases that will determine the scope of the president's authority to fire the heads of independent agencies, voting rights for millions of Americans who rely on mail-in ballots, and citizenship status for children born in the U.S. to noncitizen parents. New polling from Data for Progress finds that voters oppose the Republican position in each of these cases.
Trump’s Approval Ratings Remain Low As Voters Fret Over Economy, Inflation: I&I/TIPP Poll Terry Jones, tippinsights Can Trump reverse his slump in time for fall's midterm elections?
Comparing adults, registered and likely voters Charles Franklin, PollsAndVotes People are interested in the differences between samples of all adults, registered and likely voters. Here is a table showing these comparisons for my Marquette Law School Poll national survey, May 20-26, 2026. The Overreach Backfires: Battleground Americans Reject Abuse of Government Power Julie Alderman Boudreau, Navigator Research This Navigator Research report covers government weaponization, including which actions concern battleground constituents the most and how to message about them.





