One year into President Donald Trump's term, Minnesota voters are sharply divided on his job performance even as a majority believe he lacks the right temperament for the office and is not always truthful, results of a new statewide Minnesota Poll show.
As a candidate, Trump narrowly lost the state to Hillary Clinton while winning over voters in the vast majority of counties outside the Twin Cities. Those divisions remain a year later, with views of Trump widely divergent in different regions, between men and women and among different age groups.
For the most part, the poll shows, Minnesotans who voted for Trump still like him. They say they like that he has at least tried to tackle the promises he made to bring back jobs, cut back on immigration and put conservative judges on the bench. Even when he hasn't delivered on promises — to repeal Obamacare, to build a wall on the Mexican border, to spend a trillion dollars on roads and bridges — they like that he's still talking about it.
"I'm very surprised, and happily so," said Lionel Baumet, a retired analyst for Caterpillar Inc. who lives in the tiny Anoka County community of Lake George. "He seemed erratic when he was running, but he just seemed to come through. ... It's the economy. He's doing good on the economy."
With the stock market booming and the economy stable, the percentage of Minnesotans who approve of Trump's performance in office rose from 40 percent last April to 45 percent this month. Another 47 percent of registered voters polled disapproved, and 8 percent remained undecided at the one-year mark.
On his handling of the economy and jobs, Trump tallied a 54 percent approval rating statewide.
But there were stronger doubts about his temperament and honesty. Just 36 percent said he has the right temperament for the presidency while 58 percent said he does not, slightly higher than what the Minnesota poll found last April. Meanwhile, 53 percent of voters said they don't think Trump generally speaks the truth.
"I worry about how fit he is," said Sheryll Mennicke, a retired educator from St. Paul. "I worry that he has a not-very-robust relationship with the truth."