Trumpcare is no longer polling in the teens now that it's been passed out of the House and the regular crowd of gullible reactionaries have been subject to an onslaught of lies from Republicans. The same 30 percent crowd that has always reliably come home to Republicans, no matter how awful what they're doing gets, is now tepidly behind Trumpcare. The problem for Republicans, though, is that's still less than one-third of the voting population, and that third is pretty squishy.
Americans say, 39 percent to 26 percent, that the AHCA would likely be worse, not better, than the current health care law. Just 14 percent believe the AHCA would make things better for them personally, while 27 percent say it would make things worse. A near-majority, 49 percent, say they don’t expect the bill to affect them very much, or that they aren’t sure what effect it would have.
Strong support in the single digits is not what Senate Leader Mitch McConnell would like to go into battle with, not for a president who's broken disapproval records. His fellow Republican senators who also have to run for re-election in 2018—especially Nevada’s Dean Heller and Arizona’s Jeff Flake—are probably not going to be too pleased with this polling, either.