Research 2000 for Daily Kos. 3/23-26. All adults. MoE 2% (3/16-19 results):
| FAVORABLE | UNFAVORABLE | NET CHANGE |
---|
PRESIDENT OBAMA | 65 (67) | 29 (28) | -3 |
| | | |
PELOSI: | 37 (39) | 43 (41) | -4 |
REID: | 34 (34) | 48 (47) | -1 |
McCONNELL: | 20 (19) | 54 (54) | +1 |
BOEHNER: | 14 (13) | 56 (57) | +2 |
| | | |
CONGRESSIONAL DEMS: | 43 (44) | 49 (48) | -2 |
CONGRESSIONAL GOPS: | 18 (17) | 71 (72) | +2 |
| | | |
DEMOCRATIC PARTY: | 52 (53) | 38 (39) | +0 |
REPUBLICAN PARTY: | 27 (27) | 64 (65) | +1 |
Full crosstabs here. This poll is updated every Friday morning, and you can see trendline graphs here.
After falling consistently, the GOP may have finally hit bottom in the Daily Kos Research 2000 tracking poll. Each of the GOP indicators ticked up and the Dem indicators ticked down. That, of course, still leaves the GOP in a weak position, and the poll doesn't reflect the GOP "budget" proposal yesterday, which was widely panned. Still, going up is better than going down.

However, the right/wrong track indicator ticked up two points (now 39/59), tying its high for the year on right track but a point higher than the 58 low for wrong track.
As for where polling aggregates leave us for job approval:

The steady approval and the creeping-up disapproval (mostly Republicans) continues, a consequence of actual proposals and legislation. Look for polls that separate the independents to get a better read on that. Obama remains strong, and as several analysts have noted, the one thing people are unhappy about is the bank bailout. While they don't blame Obama, it complicates his budget plans by making people uncomfortable about spending money.
Meanwhile, on that budget question Gallup notes steady approval:

Examining views by party and ideology, more than 6 in 10 Republicans remain negative about the budget while more than 6 in 10 Democrats remain positive about it. Interestingly, only the views of moderates and liberals have shifted to a noteworthy degree -- with both groups becoming somewhat less positive over the past month.
More to come on that, as the budget process weaves its way through the Congress.