https://www.npr.org/2019/01/11/684300134/most-americans-call-shutdown-embarrassing-as-it-s-set-to-become-longest-in-histo
Most Americans Call Shutdown 'Embarrassing' As It's Set To Become Longest In History
January 11, 201911:00 AM ET Domenico Montanaro - 2015
NPR/Ipsos世論調査:最長の政府閉鎖となっている事態に、51%の国民は大統領のせいと見る

A Reuters/Ipsos Poll out Tuesday found that 51 percent of Americans said President
Trump "deserves most of the blame," up 4 points from late December 2018 around
when the shutdown began. A YouGov Poll out this week found 50 percent also blamed
Trump, also up 4 points from late December.

The NPR/Ipsos Poll also found that Trump's Oval Office address Tuesday had little
effect. Just 10 percent of Americans said the president's speech brought the country
closer to ending the government shutdown. (Nearly 4 in 10 said they did not watch
or even follow the address.)

And not many, if anyone, beyond his base say his speech convinced them that there
is a "crisis" at the Southern U.S. border. Just 38 percent of Americans overall said
his speech convinced them of a crisis at the border, and only about a third said his
speech convinced them there is a need for a wall along the border.

Independents are not with the president on either of those critical points. By a
23-point margin, 50 percent to 27 percent, independents said they disagreed that
the president's speech convinced them of a need for a wall, and by 45 percent to
32 percent, independents said the president's speech did not convince them of a
crisis at the border. Fifty-three percent of independents said it's never OK to shut
down the government, as did 50 percent of Democrats. Just 25 percent of
Republicans, though, said the same.