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Fox News Poll: Voters give poor marks to economy, Congress and Trump

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With prices still a concern and economic confidence subdued, voter anger toward Washington has reached new highs. 

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Majorities say the economy is struggling, inflation is not under control and the federal government is falling short.

A new Fox News survey finds a record 70% disapprove of the job congressional Democrats are doing, up 6 percentage points since December (29% approve). 

Views of congressional Republicans have mostly held steady, with 36% approving and 64% disapproving.

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The gap reflects greater party unity on the right: 77% of Republicans approve of their party’s leaders, while just 62% of Democrats approve of theirs.

The sour mood extends beyond Congress. Eight percent are «enthusiastic» about how the federal government is working, and another 26% are «satisfied.» But a majority is «dissatisfied» (33%) or «angry» (32%) with Washington. 

While these views are similar to the one-year point in Joe Biden’s presidency (February 2022), there are two key differences. First, the 8% enthusiastic and the 32% angry are at record highs. And, second, the partisan intensity has flipped. Republicans were more than four times as likely as Democrats to be angry in 2022, while Democrats are more than five times as likely as Republicans to feel that way now.

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FOX NEWS POLL: VIEWS ARE DIVIDED ON US ACTION AGAINST IRAN

«Political science research indicates anger is a more powerful mobilizing force than hope or fear,» says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducted the survey with Democrat Chris Anderson. «The anger on the left may be one reason Democrats have been doing so well in recent special elections and early 2026 primaries.»

Much of that frustration appears rooted in the economy. Only 30% rate it positively, down from 32% earlier in President Trump’s term (July 2025). More than twice as many say economic conditions are only fair or poor.

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Voters are still feeling cost pressures. Compared to a year ago, most say grocery prices have increased (81%), including more than half who say they are up a lot (56%). Large numbers also say costs have increased for utilities (79%), healthcare (71%), housing (65%) and gas (51%).

And while 22% say inflation is completely or mostly under control, the highest going back to 2022, most say it is not.

More than half, 57%, rate their personal finances negatively, and those ratings are especially high among independents (61%), Black voters (66%), voters under 30 (66%), women (66%) and households with income below $50,000 (74%). 

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Just 9% say there are a lot of jobs in their community that pay decent wages, while 15% say there are almost none.

Reflecting those concerns, half of voters identify the cost of living (50%) as the most important economic issue facing the country, far ahead of government spending (18%), jobs (10%), income inequality (9%), tariffs (8%) and taxes (4%).

Currently, 43% approve and 57% disapprove of the job Trump is doing overall. It was 44% and 56% in both January and December.

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Another 6 in 10 say he is focused on the wrong things. By comparison, 54% said Biden had the wrong focus in November 2021.

Virtually all Democrats are unhappy with the job Trump is doing (95% disapprove) and say he is focused on the wrong issues (94%). Republican unity is strong but not absolute: 87% approve and 83% say he has the right focus. There is a fault line within the GOP over support for the MAGA movement. 

Among Republicans who identify with MAGA, approval of the president climbs to 98% compared to just 63% among non-MAGA Republicans. And there is a similar 38-point gap in whether he is focused on the right issues (95% MAGA vs. 57% non-MAGA).

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Most independents disapprove of Trump’s job performance (72%) and think he is focused on the wrong issues (78%).

Border security is the president’s only positive issue, with 52% of voters approving (48% disapprove). His ratings are underwater by 35 points on the cost of living (32% approve, 67% disapprove), 27 points on tariffs, 23 points on the economy and healthcare, 20 points on foreign policy, 19 points on taxes, 13 points on jobs and 6 points on immigration. Republicans rate Trump far more negatively on the cost of living (33% disapprove) than other measures.

On tariffs, 63% of voters disapprove of how Trump is handling them, while another 56% oppose tariffs in general. The top concerns about tariffs are higher consumer costs, the risk of a trade war and reduced product availability. The main reasons for supporting them are preventing unfair trade practices from other countries, protecting U.S. jobs, increasing government revenue and reducing the trade deficit.

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After the Supreme Court’s Feb. 20 ruling limiting the administration’s tariff authority, 62% say Trump is being treated fairly by the high court, including majorities of Democrats (76%) and independents (58%) and half of Republicans (50%).

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Still, the Court’s own ratings have slipped: 57% disapprove, up 7 points since last summer. The higher disapproval is driven largely by a near doubling among Republicans, from 20% disapproving in 2025 to 39% today.

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Conducted February 28-March 2, 2026, under the direction of Beacon Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R), this Fox News survey includes interviews with a sample of 1,004 registered voters randomly selected from a national voter file. Respondents spoke with live interviewers on landlines (104) and cellphones (642) or completed the survey online after receiving a text (258). Results based on the full sample have a margin of sampling error of ±3 percentage points. Sampling error for results among subgroups is higher. In addition to sampling error, question wording and order can influence results. Weights are generally applied to age, race, education and area variables to ensure the demographics are representative of the registered voter population. Sources for developing weight targets include the most recent American Community Survey, Fox News Voter Analysis and voter file data.

Fox News’ Victoria Balara contributed to this report.

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La guerra contra Irán: Hezbollah cumplió su sueño de atacar Chipre y busca internacionalizar el conflicto

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El espacio aéreo de Chipre, país que ejerce la presidencia de la Unión Europea por los próximos seis meses, permanece cerrado hoy tras la detección de un nuevo dron sobre su territorio. Se trata del cuarto desde que se inició la guerra entre Irán, Israel y Estados Unidos. La isla mediterránea, cercana al Líbano y destino predilecto de vacaciones para los británicos, podría convertirse en el punto clave para que Hezbollah, la milicia shiíta libanesa proiraní, busque internacionalizar el conflicto.

La organización no se conforma con atacar a Israel. Entre la noche del domingo y la madrugada del lunes, diversos drones lanzados desde territorio libanés impactaron en bases británicas en Chipre, estado miembro de la UE que actualmente ostenta la presidencia rotativa de su Consejo; la información fue confirmada por fuentes oficiales chipriotas.

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La base de la RAF en Akrotiri fue alcanzada por una de estas aeronaves, lo que causó daños limitados; otros dos drones fueron localizados en las inmediaciones. Si bien Hezbollah no ha reivindicado la autoría, su ex secretario general, Hassan Nasrallah, ya había amenazado a la isla en 2024, poco después de la apertura del «frente de apoyo a Gaza».

Una provocación estratégica

El ataque se produce en medio de un acercamiento entre el Líbano y su vecino de ultramar, justo cuando Israel vuelve a ocupar el sur libanés y fuerza a su población a evacuar hacia el norte. Esta situación coloca a Beirut en una posición incómoda frente a su nuevo aliado estratégico —con quien firmó un acuerdo de demarcación marítima en noviembre—, así como ante la Unión Europea y el Reino Unido.

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¿Por qué llevó a cabo Hezbollah esta acción? «Busquen a Teherán«, dirán algunos. La ofensiva coincide con las represalias iraníes contra bases estadounidenses en la región, de las que Nicosia intentaba desesperadamente protegerse. Paralelamente, otro dron ingresó hoy en el espacio aéreo turco desde Irán y fue interceptado por las defensas de la OTAN.

«Las bases británicas son un objetivo potencial porque aviones estadounidenses podrían lanzar ataques contra Irán desde ellas, a pesar de que el Reino Unido ha declarado que sus instalaciones en la isla no albergarán naves de EE. UU.», señaló Charlie Charaloumbos, analista político chipriota. No obstante, Londres insistió en que estas no serían utilizadas en la guerra.

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El precedente de las bases

Un incidente de este tipo contra una instalación británica en Chipre no tiene precedentes desde el ataque con cohetes perpetrado por militantes libios en 1986, también en Akrotiri. Esta base, ubicada en una península al extremo sur —al suroeste de Limassol—, es una de las dos que Gran Bretaña mantiene en su antigua colonia desde la independencia en 1960.

«La reacción de Irán se explica, en parte, por la oferta británica de permitir a Estados Unidos usar sus bases con fines defensivos», añadió Ali Alfoneh, especialista e investigador del Instituto de los Estados Árabes del Golfo en Washington. Sin embargo, para la República Islámica no existe distinción entre acciones ofensivas y defensivas; su objetivo es claro: expandir el conflicto para aumentar su margen de maniobra.

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«Una conflagración regional les conviene», declaró una fuente diplomática occidental. Según el analista Alfoneh, Teherán busca demostrar su alcance geográfico y señalar que es capaz de provocar inestabilidad regional si Washington y Tel Aviv persisten en sus esfuerzos por destruirlo.

Chipre busca la neutralidad

En este contexto, Beirut y Nicosia han intentado reducir las tensiones. El martes, el presidente Aoun llamó al primer ministro griego, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, principal socio de seguridad de la isla dadas sus limitadas capacidades de defensa. Hasta el momento, el gobierno chipriota no ha mencionado oficialmente al Líbano ni a Hezbollah; en cambio, ha dirigido sus críticas hacia Gran Bretaña. El portavoz Konstantinos Letymbiotis recriminó que Londres «no ha indicado claramente que sus bases no se utilizarán para fines ajenos a lo humanitario».

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Chipre desea mantenerse al margen por razones económicas y diplomáticas. «Los ataques dañan su sector turístico y su imagen como mediador regional», explica Alfoneh. Nicosia teme perder inversiones si el país es percibido como un destino inseguro para los negocios.

Se espera que la Unión Europea debata pronto la activación de su cláusula de defensa mutua. Por su parte, Francia planea enviar sistemas antimisiles y el portaaviones Charles de Gaulle al Mediterráneo, mientras que el presidente Emmanuel Macron instó a Israel a desocupar el Líbano. Gran Bretaña, en tanto, reforzó su base con un buque antidrones y helicópteros.

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El dilema del desarme

¿Podrá el ejército implementar la decisión del gobierno libanés de desarmar a la milicia chiita? Es el gran interrogante en un momento delicado para una institución sin presupuesto. Ante la presión internacional, el Consejo de Ministros instó a las fuerzas armadas a aplicar el monopolio de las armas por todos los medios posibles.

Sin embargo, el comandante del ejército, Rodolphe Haykal, parece temer una confrontación directa con los efectivos de Hezbollah. El general expresó este temor durante una reunión en Baabda, el palacio presidencial, lo que le valió críticas de activistas opositores y elogios de las bases del «Partido de Dios».

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Un ministro libanés indicó que el jefe militar no se negó a obedecer, sino que expuso las consecuencias políticas de tal medida. «No quiere gestionar solo las repercusiones de esa decisión», añadió el funcionario. A estos temores se suman desafíos logísticos críticos: el ejército está mal equipado y carece de fondos tras la crisis económica de 2019. «La misión se llevará a cabo gradualmente, ya que se requiere más personal, apoyo logístico y sistemas de vigilancia modernos», concluyó un oficial retirado.

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Held at gunpoint at 9, Iranian refugee turned pastor now prays for Iran’s hour of freedom

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An Iranian refugee held at gunpoint at school before fleeing Iran during the 1979 revolution is calling for hope, democracy and prayers for his homeland as the U.S. joins Israel in targeting Iran’s ruling clerical regime.

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David Nasser, now an American pastor, spoke to Fox News Digital six days after Operation Epic Fury was launched in Iran, which reignited haunting memories for him and of the time when he was 9 years old.

«As a child, my family and I were forced to escape Iran and run for our lives,» Nasser, President and CEO of David Nasser Outreach recalled.

«We found safe harbor as refugees granted political asylum here in the United States,» Nasser said, describing how his father had been a high-ranking officer in Iran’s military, meaning «his family became targets as the government collapsed.»

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«One of my most vivid memories of realizing that nothing was ever going to be the same again was at a school assembly on a military base — a soldier called out three names and mine was called first,» he said.

David Nasser fled Iran when he was 9 years old during the 1979 revolution. (David Nasser)

«When I got to the front, the soldier dropped a piece of paper, took a gun out of his holster and put it to my head and quoted the Quran. He told me that he was sent to make an example out of me,» Nasser added.

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The principal intervened, but the message he relayed was unmistakable. Nasser recalled.

«They’re killing everybody who’s anybody. They’re trying to make an example out of people like our family, and they’re using fear,» he remembered hearing at the time.

«That’s one of my first memories of the revolution, but really just being completely scared for my life.»

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Soon after, Nasser’s family devised an escape plan. They would pretend Nasser’s mother needed emergency heart surgery in Switzerland and buy round-trip tickets to avoid raising suspicion.

«We bought round-trip airline tickets like we were going and coming back, but we weren’t coming back. We were running for our lives,» he said.

KHAMENEI IS DEAD — AND IRANIANS DARE TO HOPE FOR FREEDOM AGAIN AFTER DECADES OF TYRANNY

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David Nasser at school

David Nasser recalled a school assembly on a military base when a soldier called out his name and put a gun to his head.   (David Nasser)

At the airport, Nasser remembers gripping his father’s hand tightly and hearing words he will never forget.

«‘If they find out we’re escaping, they’re going to kill us right here on the spot,’ my father said as his hands shook, holding mine. The last time I was in Iran, I was a 9-year-old little boy running for my life,» he said.

Now, watching events unfold in Iran from the safety of the U.S., Nasser said his heart remains with millions of desperate Iranians facing uncertainty.

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«We see them — I see them, I hear them. My heart is beating really fast for them right now with hope and with prayers for their protection and their provision,» Nasser said.

«Protection. I’m praying for protection for them. I want to be a part of the provision for them. If Iran transitions from a theocracy to a democracy, I want to help rebuild.»

ISRAEL HAMMERS IRANIAN INTERNAL SECURITY COMMAND CENTERS TO OPEN DOOR TO UPRISING

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David Nasser

Pastor David Nasser fled Iran as a child and urges hope during the U.S. military campaign in Iran. (David Nasser)

«If this moment actually comes, and they go from a theocracy to a democracy, I want to be a part of the solution — for that 9-year-old little boy that I once was. I want to do this for him.»

Beyond political change, Nasser, who is also teaching pastor at New Vision Baptist Church, said he takes solace in what he describes as spiritual transformation already underway, calling it «the fastest-growing church in the world right now or the underground church in Iran.»

«We know there’s at minimum 4 million, at maximum 8 million Christians right now in Iran,» he said.

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«In Iran, if you convert from Islam to Christianity, that can be a death sentence. If they come into your home, and you’re gathering for Christian worship, they will take your home title, you will lose your home.

«They’re in prison. They’re being tortured. They’re being ridiculed. They’re being mocked.

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«Above all, I came to America, and it was a land of opportunity. And I was given the gift of democracy. So, I would love to see democracy in Iran, where all the boys and girls are afforded what I was afforded when I managed to escape.»

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Top Trump ally Steve Daines exits Montana Senate race, plans to retire

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Sen. Steve Daines, R-Montana, will not seek reelection, opting to leave the Senate just minutes before Wednesday’s filing deadline in the Treasure State, three sources confirmed to Fox News Digital.

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Montana’s senior senator is serving his second term and was widely expected to secure a third in Big Sky Country, where President Donald Trump won by nearly 20 points in 2024. He previously served two terms in the House before making the leap to the upper chamber. 

Daines played a key role during that election cycle as chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, helping Republicans regain a majority in the upper chamber. He also backed Sen. Tim Sheehy, R-Montana, in a grueling race against former Sen. Jon Tester, D-Montana, helping the GOP secure unified control of Washington.

Sen. Steve Daines, R-Montana, plans to retire at the end of his term, opening up his seat in Big Sky Country as Republicans look to keep their grip in the upper chamber.  (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

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The lawmaker said in a video statement that after «much careful thought, I’ve decided not to seek reelection.» 

He thanked his wife, Cindy, and noted that for the last 13 years, she «has selflessly dropped me off at the airport at 5 a.m. on most Mondays for that commute back to D.C.»

«And together, Cindy and I look forward to the next chapter, like cherishing moments with seven grandchildren, spending a bit more time in Montana and continuing to make a difference,» he said.

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With Daines set to leave the Senate, Republicans will now look to hold the seat. Montana’s primary election is scheduled for June 2.

REPUBLICAN LAWMAKERS’ EARLY RETIREMENT RUMORS SEND SHOCKWAVES THROUGH HOUSE GOP

President Donald Trump points finger during White House meeting

President Donald Trump takes questions from the media during a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Washington, D.C.  (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Montana U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme filed just minutes before Daines withdrew from the race, according to the Montana Secretary of State. Earlier Wednesday, former University of Montana President Seth Bodnar entered the race as an independent.

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Trump wasted no time lauding Daines and swiftly backing Alme in a post on Truth Social.

«Steve Daines, of Montana, is one of our truly Great United States Senators,» Trump said. «He honorably served for 12 years in the Senate, and 2 in the House of Representatives. He did a job like few others are capable of doing but, sadly for our Country, Steve’s Term is up, and he has decided to leave the Senate and, ‘pass the torch’ to Kurt Alme, my TRUMP 45 and TRUMP 47 U.S. Attorney.»

OPERATION EPIC FURY SURVIVES SENATE CHALLENGE AS REPUBLICANS CLOSE RANKS BEHIND TRUMP

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Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Mont., arrives to a caucus meeting with House Republicans on Capitol Hill on May 10, 2023. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Three Democrats are also running on the opposite side of the primary field: Alani Bankhead, Reilly Neil and Michael Blackwolf.

A spokesperson for the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, told Fox News Digital in a statement that «Republicans’ midterm prospects are so bleak in 2026 that yet another Senator is running for the hills.» 

«Steve Daines is joining more and more of his colleagues in deciding to throw in the towel rather than defend their toxic record,» they said. «This news is the latest flashing warning sign to all GOP senators: Your jobs are not safe, retire or lose.»

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Daines’ departure comes on the heels of Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Montana, who earlier this week announced he plans to retire from the House.

Zinke cited several undisclosed surgeries stemming from injuries he suffered as a Navy SEAL.

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«My judgment and experience tell me it is better for Montana and America to have full-time representation in Congress than run the risk of uncertain absence and missed votes,» Zinke said.

His open primary has already attracted several Montana Republicans, including Montana Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen and conservative radio host Aaron Flint, who swiftly earned the endorsements of Zinke and Trump.

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