US President Donald Trump departs after speaking with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026, in Washington. (Photo | AP)
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Trump to sue the New York Times again. This time over unfavourable opinion poll

Trump lashed out over an NYT-Siena poll finding only 40% approval for the Republican -- in line with multiple other polls showing declining support a year into his second term.

AFP

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump announced on Thursday he will sue The New York Times over an unfavorable opinion poll and suggested that what he called "fake" surveys should criminalized.

Trump lashed out after publication of a New York Times/Siena University poll finding only 40 percent approval for the 79-year-old Republican -- in line with multiple other polls showing declining support a year into his second term.

"The Times Siena Poll...will be added to my lawsuit against The Failing New York Times," Trump said on his Truth Social platform. "They will be held fully responsible for all of their Radical Left lies and wrongdoing!"

Expanding on the threat, Trump posted that "Fake and Fraudulent Polling should be, virtually, a criminal offense."

Trump has fired off multiple defamation lawsuits against media companies, including the BBC, CNN, the Wall Street Journal, CBS and ABC. Some have ended in multi-million-dollar settlements.

He first filed a $15 billion defamation suit against the Times in September 2025, claiming the leading US newspaper had run false stories to hurt his 2024 presidential campaign and reputation. The complaint was thrown out by a federal judge before being refiled in amended form in October.

The Times responded by calling that new lawsuit "an attempt to stifle independent reporting" and "intimidation."

Thursday's Times/Siena poll was the latest opinion survey finding that Trump's popularity continues to slide over his handling of the economy and a military-style crackdown on illegal immigration.

Times/Siena is considered to be among the most accurate and highest profile of US political surveys. Its latest findings were especially notable for laying out what the Times called the unraveling of Trump's winning 2024 coalition.

Young and non-white voters who turned out for Trump in the election against Democrat Kamala Harris have now left him, the poll found, leaving him with his previous core base of older and white voters.

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