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Trump slams poll finding support for his impeachment

US President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a bill signing event at Harris Conference Center August 31, 2018, in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by AFP)

US President Donald Trump has shrugged off the findings of a new poll that shows nearly half of Americans now support his impeachment.

Trump questioned  the accuracy of the ABC News/Washington Post poll in a tweet without mentioning the survey's latest finding on the question of impeachment.

"The ABC/Washington Post Poll was by far the least accurate one 2 weeks out from the 2016 Election," he posted on Twitter Friday evening.

"I call it a suppression poll - but by Election Day they brought us, out of shame, to about even. They will never learn!"

The survey, released on Friday, has found that 49 percent of Americans believe Congress should begin impeachment proceedings against Trump. That is more than the percentage of voters – 46 percent -- who do not support impeachment.

The poll also showed that 60 percent of voters disapprove of the job Trump is doing as president, a new low.

In the previous ABC News/Washington Post poll in April, Trump's approval rating stood at 40 percent and his disapproval rating was 56 percent.

Several Democratic Party lawmakers have publicly supported bringing impeachment proceedings against Trump since his longtime attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty last week to charges of bank fraud, tax fraud and violations of election campaign finance laws.

Cohen's campaign finance law violations stem from hush money payments the lawyer arranged during the 2016 US presidential campaign to women who allegedly had affairs with Trump.

Trump is also under growing pressure after a guilty verdict for his former campaign manager Paul Manafort.

The Republican president has been dismissive of congressional efforts to impeach him.

In a White House interview with Bloomberg News on Thursday, Trump argued that Democrats would not be able to impeach him because he is “doing a great job.”

"I don’t think they can impeach somebody that’s doing a great job. You look at the economy, you look at jobs, you look at foreign, what’s going on with other countries. You look at trade deals. I’m doing a great job,” he said.

Trump had previously made a similar argument in an interview with Fox News. He has also said that the market would crash and Americans would be “very poor” if he were to be impeached.

Vice President Pence acknowledged that Democrats would try to impeach President Trump if they regain the House of Representatives in November's midterm elections.

“They’re all talking about it, and so I take them at their word, even though some of them have decided to not talk about that quite so much,” Pence told the Christian Broadcasting Network in an interview published Wednesday.


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